bob1008
Advertiser
For interior applications that will not be exposed to the elements, or UV rays, you could also consider using Fluid Film "Liquid A" which is a thinner formula.
You can see the viscosity difference between "A" and "NAS" in the middle of the page at the link below:
Liquid A vs NAS viscosity
Liquid A information
All the Fluid Film formulas
Fluid Film is thixotropic.
This especially applies to bulk NAS, (gallons, pails, and drums)
thix·ot·ro·py
The property exhibited by certain gels of becoming fluid when stirred or shaken and returning to the semisolid gel state upon standing.
What this means is.. as Fluid Film NAS sits, it gets thicker. There are two things you can do to make Fluid Film NAS spray with a fine even flow:
a) Store it at room temperature if possible.
b) Shake and agitate the heck out of the Fluid Film container. The more you shake it, the more it will thin and liquify. You should not need to add any thinner to NAS if you shake it enough.
Shake, shake , shake.
You can see the viscosity difference between "A" and "NAS" in the middle of the page at the link below:
Liquid A vs NAS viscosity
Liquid A information
All the Fluid Film formulas
Fluid Film is thixotropic.
This especially applies to bulk NAS, (gallons, pails, and drums)
thix·ot·ro·py
The property exhibited by certain gels of becoming fluid when stirred or shaken and returning to the semisolid gel state upon standing.
What this means is.. as Fluid Film NAS sits, it gets thicker. There are two things you can do to make Fluid Film NAS spray with a fine even flow:
a) Store it at room temperature if possible.
b) Shake and agitate the heck out of the Fluid Film container. The more you shake it, the more it will thin and liquify. You should not need to add any thinner to NAS if you shake it enough.
Shake, shake , shake.