local_beekeeper
House Bee
- Joined
- Nov 27, 2011
- Messages
- 135
- Reaction score
- 7
- Location
- Devon
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- National 50, Langstroth 10
What does uv light do to them?
polystyrene may crack or disintegrate
What does uv light do to them?
[Masonry paint] rapidly looked tatty, showing every touch of prop, etc - not to mention the various green growths that appeared over the winter!
But even on day 1, white drew attention to the lines of what isn't a pretty box.
Sludge green works better (and blends in pretty well with the background) for me.
What does uv light do to them?
Did you paint directly on top of the masonry paint without any problems?
Is Cuprinol Ducksback any good for poly hives?
I recently bought 5L of the stuff.
Crap for poly hives or crap in general, for wooden hives as well?
Crap for poly hives or crap in general, for wooden hives as well?
cuprinol garden shades every time for me although limited colour choice from our local recycle centre but the price is good 0 pence but I will be experimenting with camouflage like swarms impressive art work
All polystyrene hives need painting to protect from UV light.
Think fishboxes, they float about the oceans for years and never seem to fall apart !
Conventionally, the term marine plastic pollution is used to describe macroplastics - large, visible pieces of debris. ...
However, a less-publicised but equally-serious threat has emerged in recent years: that of microplastic pollution - plastic particles measuring less than 5 mm in diameter.
So where do these tiny plastic particles come from? Well, the breakdown of larger plastic debris is undoubtedly a significant indirect source of microplastic pollution. ...
Though ocean-borne plastic trash has a reputation as an indestructible, immortal environmental villain, scientists announced yesterday that some plastics actually decompose rapidly in the ocean. And, the researchers say, that's not a good thing.
...
The researchers behind a new study, however, found that plastic breaks down at cooler temperatures than expected, and within a year of the trash hitting the water.
The Japan-based team collected samples in waters from the U.S., Europe, India, Japan, and elsewhere ...
All the water samples were found to contain derivatives of polystyrene, a common plastic used in disposable cutlery, Styrofoam, and DVD cases, among other things ...
Not true, they don't "Need" it, that's the choice of the beekeeper.
... !
Thats what I did.
Just scrubbed it over with washing soda , hosed it down and let it dry before painting. First coat coverage wasn't great, but perseverance paid off, and the green Cuprinol seems to have 'keyed' strongly onto the masonry paint, which is well-keyed onto the plastic. No primer used at all.
And the Cuprinol has been used direct onto the plastic on my others, with a good strong coating achieved like that as well.
Has anyone used any primers to good effect?
So I went with some b&q outdoor spray paints for the third coat. Lesson learnt is use normal paint next time. I was trying to save time as had a lot to do.
I would also if spraying spray the brown last and the green first…as the green looks uglier. I was trying to achieve a camouflage effect.
http://s1124.photobucket.com/user/lebouche1/media/IMG_6324.jpg.html?sort=3&o=8
Enter your email address to join: