Can a 50' Semi Trailer Frame Be Heated to 400°F Using Electrical Resistance?

AI Thread Summary
Heating a 50' semi trailer frame to 400°F using electrical resistance is impractical due to significant heat loss without proper insulation, which is typically provided by an oven. Instead, it is recommended to heat smaller sections of the trailer at a time, potentially using induction heating or a process where the trailer rolls through a heating system. Utilizing natural gas or propane for heating could also be more effective than electric resistance. Additionally, it is important to remove rubber, plastic, and air lines from the trailer before applying heat. Overall, a dedicated oven or a segmented heating approach is advisable for effective powder coating.
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If this is not ok to post then let me know, but I have a question that I feel can only be answered here.

Question: Would it be possible to heat a 50' semi trailer frame to roughly 400F through electrical resistance, I know it would require a lot of power but the reason I ask is because I am starting a powder coating business and I'm not about to build an electric or gas oven that;s over 50' long. In my mind I'd think a large power supply such as a massive welding machine (maybe?) would be able to provide enough power to heat the trailer. Now this trailer is not boxed in, they are used to haul timber and 100" logs, as I live in logging country and the salt eats away these trailers like nobody's business. Thanks in advance.
 
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My recommendation would be to find a way to heat a small part at a time. Induction heating maybe? Resistance heating the whole thing at once is quite impractical. Ovens exist as ovens in part due to insulating properties. They are made to hold the heat in. You will lose heat like crazy without an oven no matter what the method of heating. At least if you are heating a small area at a time it may be possible to have a power source capable of doing so. If you do many of these trailers I think it might pay to find an oven.
 
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I would make it a process type thing where the trailer rolls through the heating and then the Powder Coat process, So you are only heating a 4-8 foot section depending on how fast you can apply the PC. Do it with NG or propane.
 
Windadct said:
I would make it a process type thing where the trailer rolls through the heating and then the Powder Coat process, So you are only heating a 4-8 foot section depending on how fast you can apply the PC. Do it with NG or propane.
Can you apply heat prior to the powder? What I have watched is always powder first, then roll into the oven.
 
Aside from the problem at hand, wondering how much hardware needs to come off a trailer before heat. Most rubber and plastic I would assume. Includes lots of air lines and such.
 
Averagesupernova said:
What I have watched is always powder first, then roll into the oven.
Sounds right. And heating last in a process would still work?
 
With that much metal - I am sure pre-heat - and a finish would work best. We did this with copper busbar, fluidized bed, you do not get enough build up if us do it cold, but then we were looking for a lot build up -- 1/8".
 
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