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wendy2b2002 August 2nd 06 02:18 PM

Rejuvinating marine ply
 
I have a sailing boat that's decking is marine ply, it's showing it's
age as it was left for three years uncovered and the marine ply is,
although sound, discoloured and stained in place, as well as starting
to cracj a bit. Is it possible to apply something like Teak oil before
marine varnish to help revive the wood?


Glenn Ashmore August 2nd 06 02:31 PM

Rejuvinating marine ply
 
Teak oil would probably not be a good idea as it can effect the varnish
bond. Scrub it down with an oxalic acid "wood brightener" and rinse well.
After it dries work out any remaining stain with some 120 grit sandpaper.
You might also consider flowing on a coat of epoxy to fill the checking and
seal everything before topping with a UV resistant varnish.

--
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

"wendy2b2002" wrote in message
ups.com...
I have a sailing boat that's decking is marine ply, it's showing it's
age as it was left for three years uncovered and the marine ply is,
although sound, discoloured and stained in place, as well as starting
to cracj a bit. Is it possible to apply something like Teak oil before
marine varnish to help revive the wood?




Wm Watt August 2nd 06 07:40 PM

Rejuvinating marine ply
 
linseed (flaxseed) is the oil in oil-based paints and varnishes. it is
often used by itslef (boiled linseed oil) diluted 50% with kerosene or
paint thinner so it will soak into the wood grain. It costs less than
paint or varnish. I use it that way alone on the inside or as a
primer-sealer on the outside before painting or varnishing.

wendy2b2002 wrote:
I have a sailing boat that's decking is marine ply, it's showing it's
age as it was left for three years uncovered and the marine ply is,
although sound, discoloured and stained in place, as well as starting
to cracj a bit. Is it possible to apply something like Teak oil before
marine varnish to help revive the wood?



Brian Whatcott August 3rd 06 02:53 AM

Rejuvinating marine ply
 
On 2 Aug 2006 06:18:00 -0700, "wendy2b2002"
wrote:

I have a sailing boat that's decking is marine ply, it's showing it's
age as it was left for three years uncovered and the marine ply is,
although sound, discoloured and stained in place, as well as starting
to cracj a bit. Is it possible to apply something like Teak oil before
marine varnish to help revive the wood?


The traditional way with preparing brightwork for revarnish is to
scrape. There's a variety of useful scrapers out there usually with a
2 inch or 3 inch blade which can be turned or replaced. They usually
have a yellow handle, I notice (!)
The idea of a wood floor buffer comes to mind as well.....

Brian Whatcott Atus OK

Richard J Kinch August 3rd 06 07:45 AM

Rejuvinating marine ply
 
Wm Watt writes:

linseed (flaxseed) is the oil in oil-based paints and varnishes. it is
often used by itslef (boiled linseed oil) diluted 50% with kerosene or
paint thinner so it will soak into the wood grain. It costs less than
paint or varnish. I use it that way alone on the inside or as a
primer-sealer on the outside before painting or varnishing.


You've just described "teak oil" (diluted linseed oil).

Ian Malcolm August 3rd 06 09:49 AM

Rejuvinating marine ply
 
Richard J Kinch wrote:
Wm Watt writes:


linseed (flaxseed) is the oil in oil-based paints and varnishes. it is
often used by itslef (boiled linseed oil) diluted 50% with kerosene or
paint thinner so it will soak into the wood grain. It costs less than
paint or varnish. I use it that way alone on the inside or as a
primer-sealer on the outside before painting or varnishing.



You've just described "teak oil" (diluted linseed oil).


Personally I like Owatrol for a base coat on weathered wood before
revarnishing. Use neat till it will take no more, then 1:1 with any
alkyd and *most* one pot varnishes then halve the ratio again in the
next few coats. Its a flow improver so you want to keep using 10% - 20%
right through. It also does wonders with rust! Google for it.

--
Ian Malcolm. London, ENGLAND. (NEWSGROUP REPLY PREFERRED)
ianm[at]the[dash]malcolms[dot]freeserve[dot]co[dot]uk
[at]=@, [dash]=- & [dot]=. *Warning* HTML & 32K emails -- NUL:
'Stingo' Albacore #1554 - 15' Early 60's, Uffa Fox designed,
All varnished hot moulded wooden racing dinghy.


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