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Beyond Surfaces #1 - Intelligent Coating Solutions

Find more about the Segment’s story in our first customer magazine edition!

Beyond Surfaces #1 - Intelligent Coating Solutions

The Oerlikon Balzers and Oerlikon Metco brands have been working together for almost two years now under the roof of the Oerlikon Group’s Surface Solutions Segment.

Intelligent coating solutions for the Aerospace and the Automotive industry, for one of the world’s most prestigious buildings, and even for space – let us surprise you with fascinating stories on how we and our customers bring Surface Solutions to life!

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Proven technology for One World Trade Center

Drytec Trans-Canada, a long-standing Oerlikon Metco customer and paint and grit blasting expert, relied on the Metco 16E wire combustion spray gun for the zinc coating of the spire of One World Trade Center in New York.

Proven technology for One World Trade Center

The contract to corrosion protect the tower’s spire was awarded to Drytec Trans-Canada by the New York and New Jersey Port Authority, which owned the building at the time. From the outset it was clear to all involved that the sheer size of the workpiece posed an enormous challenge. The original plan to galvanize the high-strength steel was quickly dismissed, in view of the immense size of the spire components, the varying thicknesses and requirement for double dipping. Painting was also not an option, as the binders in the paint would have interfered with satellite communications. A pure zinc coating was chosen as this could provide the required conductivity, as well as achieve the required coating thickness of between 250 and 500 μm. 

The search for a process

The next step was to find a process able to fulfil the coating thickness requirements and to accommodate the spire’s highly complex geometry. Ultimately the Drytec team presented flame spray technology to the building owners and then spent nearly a year testing the equipment.

Oerlikon Metco’s Key Account Manager was also contacted at this time, because Drytec was confronted with another challenge – the required coating bond strength of 4.8 MPa. Drytec, moreover, had to submit a process description to the New York City Inspector precisely documenting each step of the coating process, and describing the measures to prevent overspray, i.e. excess spray not applied to the workpiece.

I don’t want to have to climb up there with a can of paint in a few years time to touch up the structure!

The City Inspector to Oerlikon Metco‘s Key Account Manager.

Metco solution fulfilled all requirements

Shortly afterwards, Oerlikon Metco presented the capabilities of the Metco 16E combustion spray gun with zinc wire to the New York City Inspector at Drytec headquarters – and won him over completely. An adhesion strength of 8.3 MPa on all spire parts was actually achieved, thanks to the outstanding combination of spray equipment and spray material. The required coating specifications, SSPC SP10 and SSPC-CS23, the norm for thermal spraying (ISO 2063) and, of course, the customer’s required coating thickness, could all thereby be fulfilled.

Seventeen sections to objective

Having found the right process, the work could start. The lower six spire sections were too bulky and too heavy to be transported, so Drytec rented a hangar near the port to perform the final metallization. The individual sections were delivered in three parts and welded together on site. The application of the zinc corrosion coating required the simultaneous use of three wire combustion spray guns. Drytec kept six of these guns on hand at all times to enable any necessary maintenance to be performed without disruption to the coating process. 

Seventeen sections, some comprising nested tubes, had to be zinc-coated. For some, hard-to-reach areas, an extension module – the Oerlikon Metco XT6-18T 45-degree-tilt angle spray gun – was needed.

Absolutely convincing

Especially challenging was the narrow available time window between abrasive grit blasting and the application of the zinc coating, due to the rapid corrosion of highstrength steel: the coating had to be applied within four hours after grit blasting. Drytec used a total of 11,500 kg of zinc wire to coat the 139.6 metre high spire.

The Key Account Manager likes to recall the City Inspector’s reaction to his presentation: “He said to me: I don’t want to have to climb up there with a can of paint in a few years time to touch up the structure! If one of your customers should ever doubt the quality of this process, just tell him that the spire of the World  Trade Center was coated using a Metco 16E and zinc wire.”

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Petra Ammann

Petra Ammann

Head of Communications Oerlikon Balzers
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