Panelbeaters go even greener with new tech

Bridgman St Panelbeaters commercial manager Jarrod Hodson holds a handheld spectrophotometer used...
Bridgman St Panelbeaters commercial manager Jarrod Hodson holds a handheld spectrophotometer used to match colour, as part of their recently acquired $48,000 paint mixing system. PHOTOS: PETER MCINTOSH
A Dunedin panelbeater says their nearly $50,000 new painting machine is the "jewel in the crown" of their efforts to help the environment.

Bridgman St Panelbeaters commercial manager Jarrod Hodson said the PPG "MoonWalk" paint mixing system — believed to be the only one in the city — was the latest in a series of steps taken by the business to reduce their impact on the environment.

Using a handheld scanner, the machine found the best colour match for a vehicle and automatically mixed paints together to create it, ready to be sprayed on to the vehicle.

The $48,000 state-of-the-art investment arrived last last year and would be the "jewel in the crown" for the environment, he said.

The business had shifted from solvent to more environmentally friendly water-based products for vans, utes and cars about six years ago, which the "MoonWalk" enhanced by producing close to zero waste.

"Even though we had moved to water-based, we still were essentially manually mixing it by hand, on a computer with computer scales, but still by hand to a formula.

One of the selection of tinters that can be used.
One of the selection of tinters that can be used.
"All we do is essentially tell it what to mix and put the container in, so it's a vast step up from the last step we made."

The business had also recycled all their paint thinners, paint cans and discarded metal panels from vehicles for nearly a decade.

Mr Hodson believed the industry had moved away from the perception of "being just old tradies and stuff" to a highly technical industry.

"Just going decades and decades back, I think panelbeaters and painters were seen in general as just people that would be on the booze and that type of thing.

"But that is definitely a stereotype, whereas now ... it's a highly technical field."

tim.scott@odt.co.nz