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#1
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Old deck problem
I have a 1923 Clyde Day Sailer that has been somewhat neglected and the
problem I want to sort out is the deck. the deck is made od tongue and grooved pitch pine boards about 4" x 1" and over time they have shrunk and bowed. I would like to restor this to what it was. and cover it with Canvas in the traditional way. Do you think the boards will swell if I wet it and keep it wet for some time ? or do you think I should replace the whole lot with new? Also, has anyone used "antifreeze" in wood preserving and what where the results like? Cheers Bob |
#2
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Old deck problem
On Sun, 23 May 2004 17:13:18 +0100, "Bob Long"
wrote: I have a 1923 Clyde Day Sailer that has been somewhat neglected and the problem I want to sort out is the deck. the deck is made od tongue and grooved pitch pine boards about 4" x 1" and over time they have shrunk and bowed. I would like to restor this to what it was. and cover it with Canvas in the traditional way. Do you think the boards will swell if I wet it and keep it wet for some time or do you think I should replace the whole lot with new? Before you replace with new wood: Cover the deck with wet blankets for a few days. I straightened out a warped deck last winter. Also, has anyone used "antifreeze" in wood preserving and what where the results like? There was a guy that promoted antifreeze to cure rot. He also thinks it is a mircle panacea when applied to the human body. There are more effective ways of dealing with rot. The best is to replace the affected member. |
#3
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Old deck problem
P.C. Ford ) writes:
There was a guy that promoted antifreeze to cure rot. He also thinks it is a mircle panacea when applied to the human body. There are more effective ways of dealing with rot. The best is to replace the affected member. some members are irreplaceable the guy is Dave Carnell, a chemist. look at the writeup on his website. someone posted the address here recently. -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ William R Watt National Capital FreeNet Ottawa's free community network homepage: www.ncf.ca/~ag384/top.htm warning: non-freenet email must have "notspam" in subject or it's returned |
#4
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Old deck problem
I've heard that if you apply antifreeze to old timber it absorbs it like
water but does not give it up so easily, thus stabilising the wood from further movement. and protecting it from rot as a bonus! cheers Bob "Bob Long" wrote in message news:JY4sc.224$MU2.53@newsfe4-gui... I have a 1923 Clyde Day Sailer that has been somewhat neglected and the problem I want to sort out is the deck. the deck is made od tongue and grooved pitch pine boards about 4" x 1" and over time they have shrunk and bowed. I would like to restor this to what it was. and cover it with Canvas in the traditional way. Do you think the boards will swell if I wet it and keep it wet for some time ? or do you think I should replace the whole lot with new? Also, has anyone used "antifreeze" in wood preserving and what where the results like? Cheers Bob |
#6
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Old deck problem
P.C. Ford ) writes:
On 24 May 2004 03:21:32 GMT, (William R. Watt) wrote: P.C. Ford ) writes: There was a guy that promoted antifreeze to cure rot. He also thinks it is a mircle panacea when applied to the human body. There are more effective ways of dealing with rot. The best is to replace the affected member. some members are irreplaceable Could you give an example? In thirty years of doing this stuff for a living, I have yet to find such a member. which body part are you using to earn your living? -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ William R Watt National Capital FreeNet Ottawa's free community network homepage: www.ncf.ca/~ag384/top.htm warning: non-freenet email must have "notspam" in subject or it's returned |
#7
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Old deck problem
On Mon, 24 May 2004 07:10:31 -0700, P.C. Ford
wrote: On 24 May 2004 03:21:32 GMT, (William R. Watt) wrote: P.C. Ford ) writes: There was a guy that promoted antifreeze to cure rot. He also thinks it is a mircle panacea when applied to the human body. There are more effective ways of dealing with rot. The best is to replace the affected member. some members are irreplaceable Could you give an example? In thirty years of doing this stuff for a living, I have yet to find such a member. Evidently, the funny bone. Brian W |
#8
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Old deck problem
even antifreeze treated wood will dry out again
I wonder if the deck boards could be removed, reworked and relaid without the gap. "Bob Long" wrote in message news:JY4sc.224$MU2.53@newsfe4-gui... I have a 1923 Clyde Day Sailer that has been somewhat neglected and the problem I want to sort out is the deck. the deck is made od tongue and grooved pitch pine boards about 4" x 1" and over time they have shrunk and bowed. I would like to restor this to what it was. and cover it with Canvas in the traditional way. Do you think the boards will swell if I wet it and keep it wet for some time ? or do you think I should replace the whole lot with new? Also, has anyone used "antifreeze" in wood preserving and what where the results like? Cheers Bob |
#9
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Old deck problem
"Scott Downey" ) writes:
even antifreeze treated wood will dry out again I wonder if the deck boards could be removed, reworked and relaid without the gap. when wood planks get wet and expand too much the fibres along the edges are crushed. when it dries out permanent gaps open up. the wood cannot be put back in its original shape to close the gaps. however if the wood only dries out and gaps open up, then wetting the wood will close the gaps. -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ William R Watt National Capital FreeNet Ottawa's free community network homepage: www.ncf.ca/~ag384/top.htm warning: non-freenet email must have "notspam" in subject or it's returned |
#10
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Old deck problem
Does anyone know Dave Carnell's website. The old one doesn't work, at
least not today June 17th http://home.att.net/~DaveCarnell Thanks (William R. Watt) wrote in message ... P.C. Ford ) writes: There was a guy that promoted antifreeze to cure rot. He also thinks it is a mircle panacea when applied to the human body. There are more effective ways of dealing with rot. The best is to replace the affected member. some members are irreplaceable the guy is Dave Carnell, a chemist. look at the writeup on his website. someone posted the address here recently. |
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