I like how this one is rated for 2000° whereas the grill paint is rated for 1200°.

I am building a charcoal grill and I will be painting the exterior of the grill, bottom will be very close to the coals so I’d like a higher temp rating. Thanks.

by AlarmingRate69

10 Comments

  1. PoemSpecial6284

    Yes,but the taste is off putting when used on the grill grates

  2. Really???
    On a serious note, treat your grill like a cast iron or high carbon steel pan, season it! Don’t paint it

  3. I used the grill paint version, it worked fine. If it’s on the outside it probably doesn’t matter which one you use. Long term performance is probably more related to how well you sand and prep rather than temp rating of the paint.

  4. cycle_addict_

    I’ve used it on engine parts. I have not used it on things that touch my food.

  5. It’s a great for a couple of top coats. Prep the surface and use the high temp primer. Primer is 10X more important than the top coat.

  6. -Snowturtle13

    Yes works great. Used it on my stove pipe to my wood stove though rather than a grill

  7. SDEO_7476

    Got it. Do not spray directly on food!

    But seriously I am about to do the exterior of my grill so glad I found this!

    Any recommendations for best tools to prep the surface with?

    I have wire brush heads, steel wool, scrapers, sand paper.

    Ty

  8. Kitchen-Lie-7894

    I used it on my offset smoker and it worked great. Externally only of course. I didn’t spray it inside.

  9. Numerous-Ad2571

    Surface prep of the steel is going to be the biggest key to longevity. It can’t be stressed enough.

    Quality of paint becomes irrelevant if poor surface prep is done.

    I’ve spent a career in the painting and coating industry and do testing for corrosion, impact, hardness, adhesion, etc. A high dollar coating with shit surface prep will fail no matter what.

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