In order to understand the difference between preservative paints and preservative paints, the core is the “specific include relationships”: preservative paints are subcategorys of preservative paints, and preservative paints cover a broader “large concept” with clear differences in dimensions such as composition, form, applicable landscape, etc., which can be compared with the following five core dimensions:
I. Core differences: “inclusion and inclusion” in the conceptual context
Preservative paint: is the sum of all materials that have the function of “preventing the erosion of base materials (e. G. Metal, concrete, wood)” in a very broad range of “paints” containing paints, including paints without paint, powder coatings, ointment coatings, etc。
Preservative paints: the most common subcategory of preservative coatings, specifically for liquid preservative materials made of resin as a membrane base, coatings (e. G., stain-proof paint), solvents and assistants, usually to be constructed by brushing, rolling, spray, etc。
In short, all anti-corruption paints are preservative paints, but not all preservative paints are preservative paints。
Ii. 5 detailed comparison of dimensions
In order to make a clearer distinction, it can be carried out in terms of components, form, construction methods, applicable scenes, performance focus, etc.:

Typical example: visual distinction
Differences can be understood more quickly through specific product cases:
It is a preservative coating, but not a product of preservative paint:
Powder preservative coatings: for interior walls of pipes, auto parts, which need to be baked and baked at high temperatures, in powder form, non-solvent, not “paint”。
Pyramid preservative paints: solvent-free, ointment coated, constructed through high-pressure spray, for use in reservoirs, oil tank walls, water resistant chemicals, not “paint”。
Preservative paints: non-containable (transparent), used for wood or metal surface preservation (e. G., odour paints), and not called “paints” for lack of paints (paints are required)。
Products that are repugnant:
(c) ethanol-acid preservative paints: common civil preservative paints, used for outdoor fences, iron doors, low price and general durability。
Epoxy preservative paints: are commonly used by industry, for mechanical equipment, storage tanks outside walls, oil-resistant and water-resistant, and need to be accompanied by base paints。
Aqueous acrylate preservative paints: environmentally friendly, for indoor metal components, volatilization without organic solvents and moderate preservation。
Iv. Summary: how
In practical applications, selection may be based on the severity of the use and the construction conditions:
For routine civilian, non-cooled environments (e. G., household fences, small equipment) and simple construction (self-painting): select anti-corrosive paints (e. G., aqueous epoxy, olacid anti-corrosive paints), the value is high。
For industrial-grade, demanding environments (e. G. Chemical workshops, marine platforms, underground pipelines) or special performances (high temperature resistance, strong acid resistance): select specific anti-corruption coatings (e. G. Fluorocarbon coatings, polypolymer coatings, powder preservative coatings)。
In sum, the core difference between the two is that “widening” and “form diversity” can be accurately distinguished and selected by understanding “incorporating relationships” and then combining the performance needs of specific scenarios。




