Radiator Paint Colors

iStock 000006512027Small

Ever wonder why so many of the old radiators you see are painted silver? Back in the day, they were mostly plain grey metal, but then the Spanish Influenza arrived during the winter of 1918-19 and that changed everything. So many people died from this airborne virus that the Board of Health came out with a rule that we had to keep our windows open to prevent disease. Open-window ventilation led to huge radiators. When the Great Depression arrived, folks looked for ways to tone down those oversized radiators. Paint that contained flakes of metal (aluminum or bronze) had a way of cutting a radiator’s output by 20 percent so they started painting radiators that distinctive silver color. Funny thing is if you add a coat of ordinary pain on top of this, the radiator’s output goes right back to what it was. It’s true!

Categories

Leave a comment

Related Posts

Dead Men's Steam School Seminar

This all-technical, three-hour seminar will make you familiar with the many types of old steam heating systems and what goes wrong with them. Dan Holohan’s easy-to-follow...

Published on 11/04/2024 1:36 PM by Dan Holohan
Posted in Steam Heating
download
Classic Hydronics Seminar

In this all-technical three-hour seminar, Dan Holohan will give you a Liberal Arts education in those Classic Hydronics systems. He’ll have you seeing inside the pipes as...

Published on 11/04/2024 1:30 PM by Dan Holohan
Posted in Hot-Water Heating