Metal Pre-treatment & Cleaning Services
ZAK Integrates multi-stage cleaning and conversion coating, built into our 525m automated powder coating line, so your parts bond right, resist corrosion, and stay finished.
What is Metal Pre-treatment?
Pre-treatment is the most overlooked step in any coating process and the most common cause of coating failure. Our inline spray wash system removes forming oils, deposits a phosphate conversion layer, and prepares every surface for powder application. As an integrated stage of our surface finishing process, it runs automatically on the same conveyor that carries your parts from wash to booth to oven — with zero gap between steps.
Why Pre-treatment Decides How Long Your Finish Lasts
Your powder coating is only as strong as the surface underneath it. Skip or shortcut the pre-treatment step, and even the best powder will peel, blister, or corrode within months.
Adhesion Failure
What happens:
Stamping oils, drawing compounds, and fingerprint residues create a barrier between the metal and the coating. The powder looks fine out of the oven — then peels under tape test, in transit, or during assembly.
What prevents it:
Alkaline cleaning removes every organic contaminant before the first grain of powder touches the surface.
Under-Film Corrosion
What happens:
Bare metal exposed to moisture corrodes from the inside out, even under a powder coat. You see blistering, bubbling, and orange staining — usually months after delivery.
What prevents it:
A phosphate conversion coating creates an inert barrier between the metal substrate and the powder layer, blocking moisture migration.
Surface Defects
What happens:
Residual oils, dust, and chemical traces cause fisheyes, cratering, and uneven texture in the finished coat. These defects can’t be fixed after curing — the part must be stripped and recoated.
What prevents it:
Multi-stage rinsing — including a final deionized water rinse — leaves behind a chemically neutral, contamination-free surface ready for powder application.
Every pre-treatment failure is a coating failure waiting to happen. Our integrated process eliminates the root causes before they reach the spray booth.
How We Prepare Your Parts
Our pre-treatment system is built directly into our 525m automated coating line. Your parts enter on conveyor hooks, pass through each stage in sequence, and exit ready for immediate powder application, with zero atmospheric exposure between wash and coating.
1
Alkaline Cleaning
Hot alkaline solution sprayed under pressure removes stamping oils, forming lubricants, shop dust, and organic contaminants. Effective on cold-rolled steel, hot-rolled steel, galvanized steel, and aluminum substrates.
2
Water Rinse
First rinse flushes residual cleaning chemistry and loosened contaminants from all surfaces, seams, and recesses. Prevents chemical carryover into the conversion coating stage.
3
Iron Phosphate Conversion Coating
An iron phosphate solution reacts with the metal surface to form a thin, uniform conversion layer. This layer dramatically improves the mechanical bond between the metal and the powder coat, and creates an inert barrier that resists under-film corrosion.
4
Water Rinse
Second rinse removes unreacted phosphating chemicals and excess conversion coating material. Prevents chemical carryover into the final passivation stage.
5
DI Water Rinse / Passivation
Final rinse with deionized (DI) water eliminates mineral deposits and chlorides that cause spotting and premature corrosion. Leaves a chemically clean, pH-neutral surface with no residue.
6
Forced-Air Drying / Dry-Off Oven
Parts enter a heated drying zone immediately after the final rinse. Complete moisture removal prevents flash rust on ferrous metals and ensures the powder adheres uniformly during electrostatic application.
Substrates & Material Compatibility
Different metals need different cleaning chemistry. Our line handles the substrates most common in stamped and fabricated parts, with process adjustments per material type.
| Material | Common Grades | Pre-treatment Notes |
|---|---|---|
|
Cold-Rolled Steel
SPCC, SPCD, DC01
|
Standard alkaline clean + iron phosphate. Most common substrate on our line. | Standard Process |
|
Hot-Rolled Steel
SPHC, Q235
|
May require additional descaling. Mill scale must be removed before chemical cleaning. | Adjusted Process |
|
Galvanized Steel
SGCC, DX51D
|
Adjusted chemistry to avoid zinc dissolution. Shorter phosphate cycle. | Adjusted Process |
|
Aluminum
5052, 6061, 1060
|
Modified etch chemistry to remove oxide layer. Iron phosphate not suitable — alternative conversion coating applied. | Adjusted Process |
|
Stainless Steel
SUS304, SUS430
|
Alkaline degrease + passivation. Phosphating not typically required due to natural corrosion resistance. | Passivation Only |
Not sure which substrate is right for your application? Our engineering team can help you select the material and pre-treatment combination that meets your performance spec. Talk to an engineer →
How We Verify Pre-treatment Performance
Good pre-treatment is invisible, you can’t see a phosphate conversion layer. That’s why we test results, not assumptions.
Salt Spray Testing (ASTM B117)
ZAK's powder-coated panels — including the pre-treatment layer underneath — are tested to ASTM B117. Results: up to 1,000 hours of salt spray resistance on properly pre-treated steel.
HT-YW-90 Salt Spray ChamberCross-Hatch Adhesion (ISO 2409)
Adhesion testing confirms the mechanical bond between the conversion coating and the powder layer. Properly pre-treated surfaces consistently achieve GT0–GT1 ratings — the highest adhesion grades.
Coating Thickness Measurement
Film thickness verified on every batch using a calibrated coating thickness gauge. Both the conversion layer and the powder coat layer are measured against specification.
TC-880 Coating Thickness GaugeColor & Gloss Consistency
Colorimeter verification ensures ΔE < 1.0 color match across production runs — critical for multi-part assemblies where color drift is visible.
CR-400 Colorimeter | WGG60-Y4 Gloss Meter100% Visual Inspection
Every part checked for fisheyes, cratering, orange peel, and other defects that trace back to pre-treatment quality. Defective parts flagged before they leave the coating line.
"Salt spray hours are the industry's standard measure of coating durability — and they start with pre-treatment quality. The same powder on the same steel will fail at 200 hours without proper pre-treatment and pass at 1,000 hours with it."
Designing Parts That Pre-treat Well
A few design decisions made early can significantly improve your pre-treatment results and reduce the risk of coating defects downstream.
Add Drain Holes to Enclosed Cavities
Trapped air pockets prevent wash solution from reaching interior surfaces. Add drain holes (typically 6–10mm diameter) to allow chemical flow and drainage.
Minimize Overlapping Joints
Lap joints, folded flanges, and spot-welded seams trap moisture and chemicals. Design with consistent surface access wherever possible.
Specify Material Early
Different substrates require different pre-treatment chemistry. Knowing the material at the RFQ stage lets us configure the right process from day one.
Consider Edge Quality
Deburred edges (0.3–0.5mm radius) accept conversion coatings more evenly than raw shear edges. Sharp corners also create thin powder coverage. See our deburring services →
Design for Hanging
Every part must be suspended on the conveyor via hooks. Plan with hanging points on non-cosmetic surfaces — typically mounting holes, flanges, or internal tabs.
Flag Cosmetic Surfaces
Hanging points and drip marks are unavoidable on a conveyor line. Mark which surfaces are visible (Class A) vs. hidden (Class B/C) so we orient parts for the best result.
Need help optimizing your design for coating? Our engineering team provides free DFM analysis on every project.
Frequently Asked Questions
Everything you need to know about metal pre-treatment and how it affects your coating quality, durability, and cost.
What is metal pre-treatment?
Pre-treatment is a multi-stage chemical process that cleans contaminants from metal surfaces and deposits a thin conversion coating. The conversion layer improves adhesion between the metal and the powder coat, and adds a corrosion-resistant barrier that extends the life of the finish. It’s the industry-standard preparation step before powder coating, liquid painting, or e-coating.
Can I skip pre-treatment and just degrease before coating?
Degreasing alone removes surface oils, but it doesn’t create the conversion layer that mechanically bonds the powder to the metal. Without phosphating or an equivalent step, adhesion drops significantly and corrosion resistance can fall by 50% or more. For any part that needs to pass salt spray testing, survive outdoor exposure, or meet OEM durability specs, pre-treatment is non-negotiable.
Is your pre-treatment a separate step or part of the coating line?
Fully integrated. Our pre-treatment system is built into our 525m automated coating line. Parts pass through cleaning, phosphating, rinsing, and drying stages on the same conveyor that carries them into the powder booth. There’s no break between wash and coating, which eliminates re-contamination and flash rust.
What types of metal can you pre-treat?
Cold-rolled steel, hot-rolled steel, galvanized steel, aluminum, and stainless steel. Each substrate gets an adjusted chemistry cycle, we don’t run one generic wash for all metals.
How does pre-treatment affect salt spray performance?
Dramatically. The same powder on the same steel substrate will fail at 200–300 hours without pre-treatment and pass at 800–1,000 hours with proper alkaline cleaning and iron phosphate conversion. Pre-treatment is the single biggest variable in salt spray performance after the powder formulation itself.
What's the maximum part size your line can handle?
2,200mm × 1,500mm × 600mm, the same capacity as our powder coating line, since the two systems share a single conveyor.
Do I need to specify pre-treatment in my RFQ?
Not usually. If you’re requesting powder coating from ZAK, pre-treatment is automatically included, it’s part of our standard coating process. If you have specific conversion coating requirements (e.g., zinc phosphate instead of iron phosphate, or a particular mil-spec wash), include that in your surface finish specification.
Can pre-treatment cause hydrogen embrittlement?
Our standard process uses alkaline cleaning and iron phosphate, neither of which introduces hydrogen embrittlement risk. This concern is primarily associated with acid pickling on high-strength or spring steels. If your application involves high-strength materials, let our engineering team know and we’ll confirm the appropriate process.
Ready to Get Started?
Pre-treatment is where finish durability starts. Whether you need standard iron phosphate for steel enclosures or a substrate-matched cleaning cycle for aluminum heat exchangers, our team will configure the right process for your material, spec, and volume and deliver it as part of a fully integrated coating line.