Scot-
That's right, mesh panel frames, about 100 of them bolted to the outside of some existing, 40 year old out of code railings [they built them to 36" tall back then with horizontal rails spaced 12"!! Plenty of room for little kids to climb through and show Mommy their new balancing trick on the third story!!]. The frames will bring the spacing issue into code and we add a 6" top rail- everybody's happy.
Usually you manage to give people a good laugh around here but reading through your post initiated a minor anxiety episode. We just finished 2100 LF of galvanized and powder coated DOT railing early this year and the idea the powder coat was just waiting for winter to start peeling off was a little unsettling. But it is apparently standard ops for DOT and they put our coaters through a rigorous QA/QC pre-qualification of facility, manual, material and application. Every section of that railing was inspected at my shop for fabrication/weld compliance, inspected again at the galvanizer, and then inspected twice at the powder coater, 1st for the sweep blast prior to coating 2nd after coating requiring I believe 3-4 special inspection tests: a mill thickness, a hardness, a pull off and something else I don't recall. It could very well be just the difference between paint and powder coating or it may have to do with the pre-coating media blast, but it was their spec and procedure and followed to the gnats tail. Actually looked damn good.
I have heard of many problems galvanizing mesh. The 3 jobs I've done before with this system all worked very well without warping issues and that was with 6 GA. welded mesh. The problem, so my galvanizer tells me is created with different cooling rates between mesh and the frame material that is made worse when the mesh is welded to the frames. Maybe I just got lucky with our welded mesh frames but there were about 90 +/- all about 3' X 4' with both flat bar and angle frames and there weren't but 2 panels in the lot of them that showed but the most minor warping of the mesh. Installed you couldn't see it at all. This job will be using 2 X 2 and 3 X 3 crimped mesh, all 1/4", trapped inside the U edge frames but not welded to the frames- which is what the galvanizer always wants to see. First time working with the crimped mesh so we'll run a test piece or two through the zinc. Actually it was brought to my attention from the painter who also quoted this job [and may still be doing it as we don't yet have approval for powder coating, just a better price] that we would really want to galvanize the crimped mesh because the paint would never get in between the crimps and eventually cause rust stains. Good point to look out for and never occurred to me. The cost of the galvanizing is offset by being able to remove the Tnemic zinc primer coat if it's galvanized and also reduces the paint prep blasting to a sweep blast reducing both the painters and the powder coaters cost.
I will ask the QC guy at the galvanizer about the quenching issue. H'es pretty heads up and you have me curious now. Thanks for your response.