Products

24 Grade B Various Color Ready-Mixed Paint (for Export)

    • Product Name: 24 Grade B Various Color Ready-Mixed Paint (for Export)
    • Alias: 24-grade-b-various-color-ready-mixed-paint-for-export
    • Einecs: 235-308-1
    • Mininmum Order: 1 g
    • Factroy Site: Yudu County, Ganzhou, Jiangxi, China
    • Price Inquiry: sales3@ascent-chem.com
    • Manufacturer: Ascent Petrochem Holdings Co., Limited
    • CONTACT NOW
    Specifications

    HS Code

    790343

    Product Name 24 Grade B Various Color Ready-Mixed Paint (for Export)
    Product Type Ready-Mixed Paint
    Grade B
    Number Of Colors 24
    Intended Use Export
    Form Liquid
    Application Method Brush, Roller, or Spray
    Drying Time 2-4 hours
    Finish Matte
    Package Size 250ml per color
    Solvent Type Water-based
    Shelf Life 24 months
    Origin China
    Lead Content Lead-free
    Storage Conditions Cool, dry place
    Voc Content Low

    As an accredited 24 Grade B Various Color Ready-Mixed Paint (for Export) factory, we enforce strict quality protocols—every batch undergoes rigorous testing to ensure consistent efficacy and safety standards.

    Packing & Storage
    Packing The packaging contains 24 cans of Grade B ready-mixed paint, each 250ml, assorted colors, securely boxed for export.
    Shipping The `24 Grade B Various Color Ready-Mixed Paint (for Export)` is securely packaged in sealed, leak-proof containers, ensuring safe, compliant transport. Each batch is clearly labeled and grouped by color. Shipment includes protective padding, sturdy cartons, and palletization for stability, meeting international export regulations and minimizing risk of damage during transit.
    Storage The 24 Grade B Various Color Ready-Mixed Paint (for Export) should be stored in tightly sealed containers in a cool, dry, and well-ventilated area, away from direct sunlight, heat sources, and ignition points. Keep containers upright and securely arranged to prevent spillage. Store away from incompatible materials, such as oxidizers, and ensure proper labeling for easy identification and safe handling.
    Application of 24 Grade B Various Color Ready-Mixed Paint (for Export)

    Color consistency: 24 Grade B Various Color Ready-Mixed Paint (for Export) with high color uniformity is used in large-scale commercial wall coatings, where consistent and reliable color output is achieved across extensive surfaces.

    Viscosity grade: 24 Grade B Various Color Ready-Mixed Paint (for Export) at medium viscosity (120 KU) is used in industrial machinery coating, where optimal leveling and reduced drip formation ensure smooth, even finishes.

    Particle size: 24 Grade B Various Color Ready-Mixed Paint (for Export) with fine particle size (≤20 µm) is used in furniture manufacturing, where enhanced smoothness and fine surface texture are delivered.

    Stability temperature: 24 Grade B Various Color Ready-Mixed Paint (for Export) with stability up to 60°C is used in exterior architectural applications, where color retention and performance are preserved under varying climates.

    VOC content: 24 Grade B Various Color Ready-Mixed Paint (for Export) with low VOC content (<150 g/L) is used in interior decorating, where indoor air quality and environmental compliance are improved.

    Coverage rate: 24 Grade B Various Color Ready-Mixed Paint (for Export) offering high coverage rate (12 m²/L) is used in residential building projects, where material efficiency and cost-effectiveness are maximized.

    Drying time: 24 Grade B Various Color Ready-Mixed Paint (for Export) featuring rapid drying (surface dry in 30 minutes) is used in automotive part finishing, where reduced process time increases production throughput.

    Adhesion strength: 24 Grade B Various Color Ready-Mixed Paint (for Export) with strong adhesion (≥2.0 MPa) is used on metal substrates, where enhanced paint bonding provides increased durability.

    Gloss level: 24 Grade B Various Color Ready-Mixed Paint (for Export) with semi-gloss finish (60 GU) is used in kitchen appliance covers, where an aesthetically appealing and easy-to-clean surface is achieved.

    Weather resistance: 24 Grade B Various Color Ready-Mixed Paint (for Export) with excellent weather resistance (500 hours QUV) is used for outdoor signage, where long-term color stability and gloss retention are ensured.

    Free Quote

    Competitive 24 Grade B Various Color Ready-Mixed Paint (for Export) prices that fit your budget—flexible terms and customized quotes for every order.

    For samples, pricing, or more information, please contact us at +8615365186327 or mail to sales3@ascent-chem.com.

    We will respond to you as soon as possible.

    Tel: +8615365186327

    Email: sales3@ascent-chem.com

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    Certification & Compliance
    More Introduction

    24 Grade B Various Color Ready-Mixed Paint (for Export)

    From the Batch Room to Reliable Overseas Delivery

    Every morning at the plant, the mixing tanks hum with activity. The lab puts in extra hours matching every batch’s pigment to the sample charts. Years of fine-tuning recipes give us an edge—our 24 Grade B Various Color Ready-Mixed Paint has built a reputation for hassle-free results in export markets, especially where consistency sometimes gets lost in translation. For buyers overseas, reliability matters more than promises. Even adjusting for different application habits and climate extremes, these paints offer predictable coverage and predictable drying times. We’ve seen importers in humid Southeast Asia run brush and roller tests side by side with fast-moving spray lines in the temperate north, and both report good workability without stickiness or splotching.

    This 24 Grade B line follows specific model parameters. The Batch C series focuses on core hues most specified for exterior, interior, or industrial use. Yellows, reds, greens, and blues come pre-weighed for mixing at set ratios with tested dispersants. The remaining shades fill out the spectrum with off-whites, warm earths, and several specialty colors adapted through export experience. Each color maintains the same base resin and meets previous customers’ demand for consistent gloss, fade resistance in the field, and no unwanted odor or separation after transit.

    Where Experience Shows and Price Matters

    Export painters might not always handpick each pail, but word gets around each time a container arrives with no swelling cans and no batch gone off-ratio. That takes more than packaging. Batch quality control staff spend years handling all grades, from our domestic top-tier to utility grade paints aimed for jobs that matter more for speed and price. Grade B emerged as the sweet spot—an honest product at a clear price that won’t break contracts if there’s a color difference of one or two points, but still avoids the ugly runs and chalkiness common in the cheapest blends. Our chemists look for balanced flow, touch-up friendliness, and easy cleaning, rather than advertising flashy lab claims that don't translate in real-world jobs.

    The finished product reflects a mix of customer goals and factory realism: long shelf life, full-bodied color, and paint that works from bucket to brush to wall, even if the crew lacks air conditioning or perfect light. The chemistry doesn’t chase after miracle additives unless they actually solve export shipping or on-site handling issues. We choose pigments for their tenacity, binders for flexibility, and stabilizers proven to withstand temperature swings across ocean trips or rougher roads inland. Our team refuses to cut corners with filler agents that add weight without paying off on the wall.

    No Surprises: Stability Adds Value

    Years watching feedback from builders and distributors, we realized real savings don’t come by lowering the price at the gate. They show up months later, when a local contractor opens the same grade B drum and finds a color match with the last batch, with zero clumping at the bottom. Regular audits turn up less than 0.5% non-conforming product, verified by both in-house QA staff and spot-checks from our export reps. We hand-carry samples across ports, open them under foreign sunlight, and track each complaint to root cause—from a drum that might have traveled through a leaky warehouse to a batch that responded poorly to unusual thinner.

    Compared with freshly mixed varieties sold only locally, our ready-mixed approach with the 24 series balances speed, color accuracy, and handling for export buyers operating under mixed conditions. Some global export buyers want full ISO compliance or special labeling, but most care about one real question: will it spread and cover as promised on concrete, wood, or basic drywall, with no excessive prep or last-minute trips back to the store? Our batch records, field notes, and returned-goods analysis all track on that one goal.

    How the Manufacturing Floor Balances Expectation and Reality

    Lined up in the filling room, our machines fill can after can, but decision-making comes from the plant staff who’ve seen a hundred ways for good intentions to go wrong. They remember which pigments clog filters and which resin flushes the lines most thoroughly. Most variables—grind dispersion, anti-settling additives—only matter if repeated the same way batch after batch. We keep paints at a slightly higher pigment load than budget alternatives, tipping the scales toward solid wall coverage and cleaner lines for tapers and professional decorators. The foreman reads the viscosity samples before shipping, comparing them to written targets, not just to lab averages, and flags anything that drifts toward watery or powdery texture. If they spot a deviation, the batch gets held and checked, not shipped.

    People sometimes ask, why not spring for the “top shelf” resin or import rare pigment? The answer is simple—import markets rarely pay luxury prices for commodity coatings, and fancy chemistry rarely survives months on the water, sweating in a steel container. We stay with core acrylics, vinyl blends, and colorants proven to keep color sharp even after warehouse delays. Our people work with practical ideas, not overhyped lab talk. Know-how comes from seeing what sticks in the world outside perfect labs: a little more binder, slightly more dispersant, steady test panels.

    Real Users, Real Standards

    Anyone who visits a construction site abroad knows that the painter’s daily reality doesn’t allow time for fuss or do-overs. One brushmark out of twenty might cross a seam or dirty patch. Our paints need to hide minor surface flaws without sucking the brush dry after just a few lines. We ignore marketing tricks and focus on what helps the user finish a job and move to the next site without call-backs. For export, we skip aromatic solvents and add balanced anti-skinning agents that hold up in hot trucks and damp yards. Each drum gets lined to stop “rust bloom” or lid sweating, a lesson earned the hard way after a few bad batches in the early years.

    Drilling down into field complaints, the most common question isn’t about lab numbers but whether the color holds after a year of sun and rain, or if touch-up paint matches well six months later. We test each batch under UV, water spray, and abrasion, then run side panels in buildings at the edge of the export towns. There’s no shortcut—field exposure takes time and feedback, and the best lessons come from mistakes. Last decade, we improved our yellow ochre formula the month after a major order returned with complaints on early fading. Our team rebalanced the pigment, switched stabilizers, and the customer came back two years straight. Lessons like this stick; we never dismiss a field complaint as a one-off.

    Why Batch Records Matter More Than Promises

    During busy seasons, export schedules crowd the plant calendar. A mistake here can echo for months, especially when a container leaves with labels in multiple languages, destined for unpredictable storage. That’s why the record books keep everything serious: time, date, batch formula, operator name, even humidity and ambient temperature in the filling bay. Once, a batch to North Africa showed mild pitting under film after storage—by backtracking to the original mix, we spotted an off lot number and traced the solution in future runs. Every tweak and improvement is logged and reviewed before sign-off.

    Dealers in tough markets tend to repeat orders only after the paint works reliably on the job—reputation doesn’t come from sales talk. We urge customers overseas to hold a few pails back, retest before use, and compare new shipments to last season’s stock. The entire plant team pays attention to returned containers. Instead of blaming the shipper or weather, we trace instability complaints right back to production date and storage conditions and adapt the spec if patterns show up over time. Export-ready paint isn’t a magic formula—it’s a pipeline of learned adjustments to the places it actually gets used.

    Key Differences vs. Domestic and Competing Products

    Plenty of copycat paints fill the local shelves and, sometimes, make their way into overseas shipments under lookalike labels. The difference lies in each layer of the recipe. We blend for a higher minimum pigment-to-binder ratio, creating thicker coats with fewer passes. Our product resists watering down, holding integrity in mixed-temperature settings. A common problem in the market—settling and syneresis—gets much less shout with our recipe, since staff add anti-settling agents based on real export transit times, not just textbook recommendations.

    Domestic lines often favor quick recoat times or ultra-bright tints. In regions with variable or high humidity, those features flip and cause problems—sticky finish, or poor drying under cloudy skies. The 24 Grade B formula favors balanced drying and just enough open time for brushwork or roller passes, suiting diverse conditions where weather can flip between seasons overnight. Most competing export mixes still chase specific resin blends that don’t always travel well, so their batches can split or dry halfway down the drum by ship’s arrival. Our staff tests every lot for transport resilience: a lesson learned after watching too many third-party brands lose value before the first wall gets primed. We avoid gimmick additives and work from ground-up recipe tweaks instead.

    Learning From the Field, Batch By Batch

    We keep an archive of every dissatisfied letter, site test, and third-party inspection going back twenty years. Supervisors gather every quarter to discuss which shades saw most color drift, or which components caused slowdowns or excess complaints abroad. Real change shows up as slow, steady upgrades—shifting thinner ratios, trying finer grind dispersants, adapting stabilizers batch-to-batch. We’ve noticed Grade B fits best where labor costs and build schedules don’t allow premium paint, but buyers still demand colors that withstand real sunlight, washing, and the kind of day-to-day wear you can’t duplicate in the lab.

    Every feedback loop ripples forward. Last year, a distributor in a coastal city flagged blushing in two shades sent during the wet season. R&D rewrote dryers and anti-foamers to handle extra humidity, and incoming complaints dropped off. Our staff cross-trains in real application, with some sticking to the mixing hall and others on the export logistics line, double-checking closures, stacking, and prepping labels to reduce confusion at arrival. Endless audits aren’t fun, but every extra check pays off in fewer claims and a more predictable result for the customer.

    Why Practical Adjustments Matter Most

    Innovation at our plant means adjusting what already works. Many upgrades stem from fieldwork, not sales campaigns. We blend colors in larger lots to avoid shade drift and prefer slower, more checked production cycles during hot spells. Many of the custom-tweaked colors for export started as side batches run to solve a faraway site complaint. Only formulas with solid field performance become standard. Our chemists tweak anti-mold packages or select rust inhibitors after checking samples stored for months, not just after a fast climate chamber run.

    The export team attends to each request for unusual drum sizing, thinner recommendations, or new surfaces—plywood, cement board, or older rendered walls. Even if handling requirements shift due to new packaging laws or safety regs abroad, our policy updates start with on-the-ground feedback, not theoretical compliance. We avoid regulatory risk by relying on in-plant expertise rather than just passing audits, and making real changes embedded in production notes, so even if rules shift, the paint meets what the job calls for.

    Realities of Shipping and Storage

    Most export customers never see our loading docks or warehouse. For them, the only measure is how each pail opens onsite—no separated phase on top, no hard lump at the bottom, no waste. Our teams watch temperature swings in containers, test liners with different interior lacquers, and learn which closures resist salt air best. A recent test had drums run up the coast and sit in the open for two monsoon cycles: color and texture proved stable, and not one seal failed. Every year brings new supply chain headaches—shipping delays, stricter hazard laws, altered packaging taxes—but our methods change batch by batch, not in yearly leaps.

    We track the time from fill to unload, checking for color hold and application quality. Old style plastic liners gave way to newer multi-layer options after a series of failed seals five seasons ago. Attention to detail goes into batch coding, lining, and even the amount of headspace in each drum; skimping on any one stage shows up as a messy call from a site manager fifteen thousand miles away.

    Building Trust Through Consistency

    Some buyers push for the lowest possible price, shopping across regions and chasing a few cents per kilo. That game typically leads to weak paint, extra labor, and lost customer contracts. Experience says it’s smarter to sell honestly: Grade B answers most customers’ need for color that works, coverage that cuts application time, and results that hold up for the length of the job warranty. We don’t push claims we can’t match in the field; what’s in the drum matches the log, which matches the last five shipments. This adds up to word of mouth that keeps orders coming back, often to the surprise of buyers who first came shopping for a quick fix.

    All in, our export-ready 24 Grade B mixed paint balances quality with reality. By sticking with what works batch after batch, we meet shifting field needs, respond to feedback from foreign job sites, and deliver color that lives up to the promises our team puts their name on. In our experience, progress means paying attention to every batch, every shipment, and every returned drum, so each order outperforms the last—not just at the plant, but on every wall, floor, or ceiling it touches overseas.

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