Re: Painting MDO Plywood?
Speaking from experience, I have 3 coats of exterior latex paint on top of 3 coats of epoxy resin (leftover from my boat project) on all the exterior door frames of my house with no primer between the epoxy and paint. It's been that way for 2 yrs. and I don't have the first chip yet, and you know how exterior door frames take a beating on a daily basis.
If it was my project to do, I'd take that primer money and buy a quart of epoxy resin and put 3 or 4 coats on that piece of plywood and then 2 or 3 coats of paint and forget about it.
Like you said, its only small pieces...so you do what you feel..
The thing is, just for imformational purposes, some Alkyd based paints can have a chemical reaction to epoxy resin, not unlike the reaction you get from using a polyester based resin over epoxy based resin.
From System Three:
"To do a test patch, coat a small area with the painting system selected to make sure that each paint layer dries properly and adheres well to its substrate. One reason for doing this is that epoxy resins, despite sanding and long cure time remain chemically active to certain components of alkyd paint and varnish systems. Generally, epoxy primers and LPU paints are compatible with epoxy resin coatings and may even chemically bond. However, some of the alkyd enamels and other one part paints and varnishes may not properly dry on epoxy resin coatings. The free unreacted amine in the epoxy resin coating interferes with the action of the metallic driers in some of these paints. If this happens the paint may surface dry but remain soft and tacky next to the epoxy resin surface.
A similar chemical phenomenon occurs between the amines in epoxy hardeners and the peroxide catalyst used in polyester and vinyl ester resins and primers. The amines inhibit the action of the peroxide catalyst, preventing cure at the interface. For this reason, it is not possible to “gel coat” finish cured epoxy without specialty barrier coats and it is very risky to use peroxide cured polymers directly over cured epoxy resins. Besides, gel coats don’t look all that good when applied to a male form. Their best use is against a polished female mold. For the same reason you should not use polyester based putties over an epoxy."
I dont believe the op ever used the product he has, and most likely its not what the factory used, so its a gamble based on info out there, plus, the paint system tech sheet recommends priming it, but they sell the primer so they may as well rec it
Not looking to make an argument with you jig, just putting this info out there... but ill just defer to the 1st line in your signature