Finally heard something on the Eastwood forum...it's an active group, just not the Powder Coatings forum

. Here's what I asked:
QUOTE
I need a definitive answer. Is it possible to powder coat a (kitchen) stove top and have the finish last? I've heard "yes" and I've heard "no." This is for a propane stove, so there is an open flame.
Here's a couple of answers:
QUOTE
1. Regular powder can withstand occasional exposure to temps of up to about 250f. As long as the burner flame is far enough away from the edge of the burner cutout and high enough to prevent the stove top from getting overly hot, it should be fine. There are 2 ways to know for sure if it will hold up. The first would be to fire it up under normal cooking conditions and take a temperature reading of the surface with an Infrared Thermometer. If it stays under that 250f mark, you should be fine. The other way to check is just coat it and give it a try! LOL I'd go the first route myself, but then I have an IR thermometer. Hopefully, someone else on here may have already tried it and can tell you more. Proper prep is important too. I've read posts regarding coating over porcelain, and you may want to do a search to see if you can find info on that. Never done it myself.
2. If you're not hung up on a particular color, like Colman Camp-stove Green, you might also be able to get by with a high temp powder (good to 1000 F.). Short of that, ceramic will definitely do the job.
One thing I've found out, is most powder coating businesses also coat in ceramic...that may be worth looking into also