Did Tung oil first and let dry 48 hrs
Applied a few thinned coats of dewaxed shellac.
Applied Briwax using a synthetic scrub pad and it buffed out to a
beautiful flat finish.
A few days later I had severe "dry spots". It looks like I scrubbed
through the finish and have raw wood on about 75% of the surface. I
did another sample with more coats of shellac and a few days later
same thing. I thought for sure too much scrubbing even though I did a
very light job.
But now I find one of my first samples that I never waxed and it has
done the same thing. It's like the wood sucked up the shellac and
dried out. In fact the new find seemingly has raised grain.
I've heard this wood can be a problem but kind of baffled but
intrigued too. Really glad I didn't sell the first article before I
saw this problem, it takes a few days to appear.
Any thoughts?
One of the reasons I quit using an oil for a finish and or prefinish. I
learned that a varnish will typically not do that but it does take 2 or 3
coats before it stops looking dry. I have not worked with Sapele but have
worked with many other woods that do what you describe.
At a local lumber dealer one of the salesmen had a chunk of exotic wood
setting on his desk. He ad been applying Watco oil, it looked great. How
many coats did you apply, I asked. He answered, lost count after 30.
Ed
"SonomaProducts.com" <bwx...@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:5addb076-4469-4a42...@b36g2000prf.googlegroups.com...
I've never used it and a _very_ quick search didn't uncover anything
particularly useful.
So, no known answer but--have you tried a sanding sealer to see if will
help?
I didn't go look to see if could find anything at US Forest Products Lab
site, though...
--
I am thinking that the tung is your problem. The uncured oil spoiled
your finish by trying to outgas under your shellac. Even shellac
can't bridge over larger areas of oil, say bigger than a carpenter's
pencil sized dot because the two products are not miscible. The
alcohol/shellac will simply sit on the oil, and not bite in. Although
it bridged at first, you can see the deterioration.
I had this happen years ago when I started refinishing, and
incorrectly diagnosed the problem as a contaminated surface. I guess
in a way it was, but that wasn't the culprit. It was incorrect
procedure. Unfortunately, I repeated the procedure a couple of times
before I found out it was me, not the materials, not the applicators,
not the wood, and not the procedure.
Oils of any kind over tropicals can be problematic. The grain
patterns on some can be very dense and then less than that without
changing much in appearance. With that in mind you can see how that
would affect the amount of oil that would be absorbed into the wood,
as well as how quickly it was absorbed.
Although I appreciate the beauty of real oil finishes, since they
provide very little protection to wood, I don't use them myself. I
don't like the inconsistency when using them as a finishing protocol.
I like predictability, and with so many other high quality resin
finishes out there that mimic the appearance of oil but have a more
repeatable outcome, oil is off the list.
As a suggestion for the fix, you might be in a bit of a pickle. The
wax will leave behinds silicones, oils, bee's wax and carnauba
residue. Your efforts to refinish will be hampered unless you get off
the wax entirely, so in my opinion that means a stripping.
If you try to simply sand it off, the heat from sanding and the
swirling motion of the sander will simply grind the above mentioned
components into the wood, and compound the problem. When you apply
your top coat, you will have similar results as you have now, but from
a different source.
Personally, I never, ever, put wax on anything. Thinking of
refinishing or finish repair, it makes it significantly harder to do.
Strip it, clean it down with a lacquer thinner bath and start again.
Good luck!
As always, just my 0.02.
Robert
No problem on ruining the project. Yes, this one is too far gone to
fix. I might try slathering a few coats of wax and see if I can get
enough build for it to last.
I cut parts for 4 of these, all as prototypes for my (pending) kit
business. This was the fist offiical kit I am preparing. Just got the
Sapele on a deal so tried it out. I do want to provide a recommended
finish technique (that works). So I have 3 more tries wih the parts on
hand.
I'll be taking videos and pictures during assembly and finsh of next
one or two to use as assmebly instructions.
On Nov 13, 8:21 am, "nailshoote...@aol.com" <nailshoote...@aol.com>
wrote:
> many coats did you apply, I asked. He answered, lost count after 30.- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
"SonomaProducts.com" <bwx...@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:684d6e45-bd5e-4945...@x6g2000prc.googlegroups.com...
I dunno...what particular oil product did you use? Most of the tung oil
preparations do have driers; in general doesn't one have to look
specifically for a product that doesn't? I've generally used the ol'
"tried 'n true" Minwax Antique Oil since I started w/ it 30+ years ago
when didn't know anything at all and have never been particularly
dissatisfied so I just keep on keepin' on... :)
As said, I've not had any to actually work on, but sounds to me more
like the issue of porosity than the finish not actually curing.
The surface prep w/ the sealer or a cut shellac first instead of later
would seem to me certainly worth a try...
But, of course, that's all un-swag speculation... :)
--
If you used tung oil from Woodcraft, it has NO driers. You will be
waiting.
BLO has metallic driers, but it dries slowly and still takes a while
to cure out. You can finish with another oil topcoat on top of BLO,
but you should still wait about 14 - 21 days. Since I do production
finishing, I don't use BLO except when making one of my witch's brews.
I passed this forumula on to BARRY a couple of years back, and he
loved it. BARRY (now only found on Lumberjocks) did a lot of
professional finishing for different builders in his area. Like me
(and like you!) he was always looking for an edge in speed and
appearance.
It was modified by me, and it works just as well as the original
formula that was passed to me by another finisher. You can go over
this in a couple of hours and it makes a great undercoat/conditioner.
Multiple coats of this stuff in a day are easy. Keep it stirred up.
A couple of coats of wipe on poly/varnish/shellac over this is fast
and makes the end product look like million bucks.
http://www.bburke.com/woodworking/robertsformulaphotos.html
Note that you should use pure gum turpentine (not paint thinner or
anything BUT pure gum), and dewaxed shellac (sanding sealer).
> No problem on ruining the project. Yes, this one is too far gone to
> fix. I might try slathering a few coats of wax and see if I can get
> enough build for it to last.
Well, that's got to be a relief!
> I cut parts for 4 of these, all as prototypes for my (pending) kit
> business. This was the fist offiical kit I am preparing. Just got the
> Sapele on a deal so tried it out. I do want to provide a recommended
> finish technique (that works). So I have 3 more tries wih the parts on
> hand.
>
> I'll be taking videos and pictures during assembly and finsh of next
> one or two to use as assmebly instructions.
So what are you making?
Inquiring minds you know....
:^)
Robert
> > --- Hide quoted text -
--
I am making a little clock I showed here once before. My own design,
Stcklyish, called "Little Gus". http://www.sonomaproducts.com/images/My-clock.jpg
On Nov 13, 11:35 am, "nailshoote...@aol.com" <nailshoote...@aol.com>
wrote:
> I am making a little clock I showed here once before. My own design,
> Stcklyish, called "Little Gus".http://www.sonomaproducts.com/images/My-clock.jpg
I like it! It looks strangely traditional and stylish all at once.
The clock face is a perfect match for the style. Nice job, great
design!
Robert
>Thanks. I was suspecting the oil as the problem but I really like the
>depth it adds t the wood. The Sapele is very porus and soaked it up
>well. Maybe I'll try going with a BLO job.
Try using some Waterlox on the next one. But give it time to soak in
this time, then give it plenty time to dry before waxing if you do.
Highly figured Sapele and burls can have lots of end grain exposed,
hence the soakup problem. Keep adding finish and allow it to soak in
until it doesn't do that any more. Yes, this will take weeks or
months. Just do it.
--
You know, in about 40 years, we'll have literally thousands of
OLD LADIES running around with TATTOOS, and Rap Music will be
the Golden Oldies. Now that's SCARY! --Maxine
>Yeah, I wasn't looking for build, just using the oil to add some
>depth. The Sapele has some nice sparkle when oiled. I love the look of
>a built up oil finish but just too much trouble to maintain and not
>protective enough.
Then you'll love Waterlox. See other post.