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You were talking about paint not stain. Stains (aniline or other water
based) go on the bare wood before encapsulation and the whole thing is clear coated. If you are talking about an opaque stain over a white base primer encapsulate first and use a UV resistant sealer coat over the stain to slow pigment fading. As long as the epoxy encapsulation remains in good condition almost any good quality exterior plywood will last a very long time. -- Glenn Ashmore I'm building a 45' cutter in strip/composite. Watch my progress (or lack there of) at: http://www.rutuonline.com Shameless Commercial Division: http://www.spade-anchor-us.com wrote in message oups.com... Thanks Glenn, excellent answer with more than enough detail!! Thanks also for the suggestion of trying the solid cypress although I would preferably like to finish my Water Wheels with a stained design so should I apply the stain after the epoxy and primer? Finally (I promise, last question), I give customers the option of a wooden (Marine Plywood treated with epoxy) or galvanised steel stand although the stainless stell stand is very expensive, time consuming and difficult to manufacture. In your own opinion, do you think I can use Marine plywood extensively for the Water Wheel stand even though it will be permanently partly-immersed in water? I also want the option of being able to secure the Wheel at a specific height on the stand which I reckon I can master. |
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