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Jeroen October 4th 04 06:25 PM

Epoxy coating floor?
 
Can you use epoxy on a wooden floor? I mean is it possible to use
epoxy with a wooden underground?

Short Wave Sportfishing October 4th 04 09:51 PM

On 4 Oct 2004 10:25:24 -0700, (Jeroen) wrote:

Can you use epoxy on a wooden floor? I mean is it possible to use
epoxy with a wooden underground?


It's better to seal both sides of the wood with epoxy resin/paint.

A little more information on what you are trying to accomplish would
help.

Take care.

Tom

"The beatings will stop when morale improves."
E. Teach, 1717

Graeme Cook October 5th 04 08:24 AM

Good advice.

I'd also saturate all sides of the wood, especially endgrain, with a
good fungicide and allow it to dry before applying epoxy.

Then two or three coats of epoxy to all sides, especially endgrain, as
the first coat will virtually disappear as its absorbed into the wood.

If any sun will get onto the wood you will also need a UV screen in the
resin as epoxy is very prone to UV degradation.

Happy painting

Graeme



Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:

On 4 Oct 2004 10:25:24 -0700, (Jeroen) wrote:

Can you use epoxy on a wooden floor? I mean is it possible to use
epoxy with a wooden underground?


It's better to seal both sides of the wood with epoxy resin/paint.

A little more information on what you are trying to accomplish would
help.

Take care.

Tom

"The beatings will stop when morale improves."
E. Teach, 1717



Short Wave Sportfishing October 5th 04 11:31 AM

On Tue, 05 Oct 2004 18:24:55 +1100, Graeme Cook
wrote:

Good advice.

I'd also saturate all sides of the wood, especially endgrain, with a
good fungicide and allow it to dry before applying epoxy.

Then two or three coats of epoxy to all sides, especially endgrain, as
the first coat will virtually disappear as its absorbed into the wood.

If any sun will get onto the wood you will also need a UV screen in the
resin as epoxy is very prone to UV degradation.


The new epoxy paints are freakin' amazing. I was involved in a
restoration over last winter and we used epoxy paint for the doors and
some exterior surfaces. Of course, it helped that the painter knew
what he was doing, but it was a really nice finish - all buffed out
and cleaned up, it looked like fiberglass.

Amazin'

Take care.

Tom

"The beatings will stop when morale improves."
E. Teach, 1717

Bilgeman October 6th 04 05:19 PM

tom relates:

-The new epoxy paints are freakin' amazing. I was involved in a restoration
over last winter and we used epoxy paint for the doors and some exterior
surfaces. Of course, it helped that the painter knew what he was doing, but it
was a really nice finish - all buffed out and cleaned up, it looked like
fiberglass.-

Bilge- Applied correctly to steel, the stuff will withstand 40k psi water
blasting.

But it's slow going to work with...you don't wanna mix too much for the job at
hand, coz you only have about an hour to work it before it starts setting
up...and you go through more brushes and rollers than you do with oil based
paints.

For Graeme, Hempel is prolly the most available on the US east coast.
Hempalin,IIRC, is their trade name for their two part exterior. You'll also
have to get the proper primer and thinner for the stuff too, as classic mineral
spirits won't necessarily do squat for ya.

If you can get Kansai paint company stuff, we used it on the LNG tankers and
it was fantastic.

I can't recall the other epoxies I've used. I'd go wake up the Bosun, but I
don't fancy having a mooring line fid thrown at me.

Pretty much everybody is into the epoxy market now because all the shipping
companies won't touch the old enamels anymore.

Regards;


Mutiny is a Management Tool
Select Your Tattoo while Sober


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