JoshM
New member
Hi, first time posting here though I've really appreciated some of the information I've gotten from this forum. Big thanks to PaulD for compiling the restoration guide, and to Chris Allingham for his video on YouTube for repairing a control valve! I just finished cleaning and greasing a stuck control valve from a Spirit E-310!
I'm in the process of restoring two Weber Spirit grills - an E-310 from 2015 and an E-320 from 2013, both found on the side of the road. Both have some amount of rust on the sheet metal frame, and I was planning to remove loose rust and paint these areas to prevent further corrosion. I picked up a can of Rust-Oleum High Heat Satin finish, but then learned that it requires high temperature curing (450 degrees for an hour). I called Rust-Oleum to confirm that and the guy told me to get the Rust-Oleum High Heat Ultra instead, saying it doesn't require curing. But online, I see indications that it does require curing (see Home Depot's question and answer section with responses from Rust-Oleum).
So I'm kind of confused - most of the frame will not get above the 200 degrees that regular Rust-Oleum spray paint can tolerate, and thus will never fully cure. But the top corners of the frame where the firebox rests will certainly get hotter than that. I saw recommendations for the Ultra on this forum, but also recommendations saying Ultra for the parts that touch the firebox and Rust-Oleum 2X (not heat resistant) for the rest, but of course in this case the sheet metal frame is all once piece.
I've included some photos of the rust I'm repairing. Thanks in advance for any help! This will definitely not be my last post here
I'm in the process of restoring two Weber Spirit grills - an E-310 from 2015 and an E-320 from 2013, both found on the side of the road. Both have some amount of rust on the sheet metal frame, and I was planning to remove loose rust and paint these areas to prevent further corrosion. I picked up a can of Rust-Oleum High Heat Satin finish, but then learned that it requires high temperature curing (450 degrees for an hour). I called Rust-Oleum to confirm that and the guy told me to get the Rust-Oleum High Heat Ultra instead, saying it doesn't require curing. But online, I see indications that it does require curing (see Home Depot's question and answer section with responses from Rust-Oleum).
So I'm kind of confused - most of the frame will not get above the 200 degrees that regular Rust-Oleum spray paint can tolerate, and thus will never fully cure. But the top corners of the frame where the firebox rests will certainly get hotter than that. I saw recommendations for the Ultra on this forum, but also recommendations saying Ultra for the parts that touch the firebox and Rust-Oleum 2X (not heat resistant) for the rest, but of course in this case the sheet metal frame is all once piece.
I've included some photos of the rust I'm repairing. Thanks in advance for any help! This will definitely not be my last post here
