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Jim December 26th 04 02:41 AM

Two coats of varnish. . .
 
Friday morning, I did some sanding (240) and applied a coat of Epithanes
"Wood Finish".

Today I did the second coat (the stuff does not need to be sanded
between coats if applied within 72 hours.) I only did the parts that
get direct sun, I didn't want to risk doing the stuff that was in the
shade all day. It is December and Epithanes dries very slowly.

Finished around 10, and it's just about dry at sunset.

Temperatures in the 70's, all three days just beautiful, not a cloud,
very little humidity.

Puts the Cetol neighbors to shame. Think I'll go put some miles on my bike.

This is for all those who are looking for an on topic post and are
sitting in the snow.


LaBomba182 December 26th 04 04:16 PM

Subject: Two coats of varnish. . .
From: Jim


Today I did the second coat


Only ten more to go.

Capt. Bill

Jim December 26th 04 07:49 PM



LaBomba182 wrote:
Subject: Two coats of varnish. . .
From: Jim



Today I did the second coat



Only ten more to go.

Capt. Bill

This is part of the yearly recoat.

Once a year, a little 240 and two new coats.


Calif Bill December 26th 04 08:04 PM

Banisters are much better with a tung oil finish as oposed to Varnish and
the worst Verathane. Does not get scratched and a little oil fixes up any
wear instantly. Verathane is impossible to touch up.
Bill

"Harry Krause" wrote in message
news:1104087392.97662c68d1620cda7f41aff81b8ec7dc@t eranews...
wrote:
On Sun, 26 Dec 2004 12:13:39 -0500, Harry Krause

wrote:


LaBomba182 wrote:

Subject: Two coats of varnish. . .
From: Jim



Today I did the second coat


Only ten more to go.

Capt. Bill


Indoor varnishing is more fun. I replaced a painted railing in my house
with an oak railing I bought from a local supplier. Came unfinished.
Three coats of matte spar varnish seemed sufficient.



Here's a minor tip for your next project: If you want a matte finish,

use clear
gloss for all coats except the final one. Multiple coats of the matte or

satin
varnish tend to obscure the grain too much.

BB



Cool. Thanks.




DSK December 27th 04 02:16 AM

Jim wrote:
This is part of the yearly recoat.

Once a year, a little 240 and two new coats.


C'mon, you use 240 grit for final sanding??

If you want to get even a slight nod of approval from the Zen Varnish
Masters, you have to get up to 600 grit wet-sanding.

Fair Skies... and Clean Brushes- Doug King


LaBomba182 December 27th 04 05:18 AM

Subject: Two coats of varnish. . .
From:


Here's a minor tip for your next project: If you want a matte finish, use
clear
gloss for all coats except the final one. Multiple coats of the matte or
satin
varnish tend to obscure the grain too much.


Here's a better one. **** can the matte varnish and use a one part poly for
your interior wood.
Cheaper, easier and lasts much longer.

Capt. Bill

Short Wave Sportfishing December 27th 04 11:06 AM

On Sun, 26 Dec 2004 21:16:50 -0500, DSK wrote:

Jim wrote:
This is part of the yearly recoat.

Once a year, a little 240 and two new coats.


C'mon, you use 240 grit for final sanding??

If you want to get even a slight nod of approval from the Zen Varnish
Masters, you have to get up to 600 grit wet-sanding.


"Snatch the sandpaper from my hand Grasshopper"... :)

A true Master of Sen Vanishing would use 800 grit which lasts about
one stroke. :)

OOOOOOMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM.........

Later,

Tom

Short Wave Sportfishing December 27th 04 11:28 AM

On Mon, 27 Dec 2004 11:18:57 GMT, wrote:

On Mon, 27 Dec 2004 11:06:26 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing
wrote:

On Sun, 26 Dec 2004 21:16:50 -0500, DSK wrote:

Jim wrote:
This is part of the yearly recoat.

Once a year, a little 240 and two new coats.


C'mon, you use 240 grit for final sanding??

If you want to get even a slight nod of approval from the Zen Varnish
Masters, you have to get up to 600 grit wet-sanding.


"Snatch the sandpaper from my hand Grasshopper"... :)

A true Master of Sen Vanishing would use 800 grit which lasts about
one stroke. :)

OOOOOOMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM.........


rottenstone


OOOOOOMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM......... :)

Later,

Tom

DSK December 27th 04 02:18 PM

If you want to get even a slight nod of approval from the Zen Varnish
Masters, you have to get up to 600 grit wet-sanding.



Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:
"Snatch the sandpaper from my hand Grasshopper"... :)

A true Master of Sen Vanishing would use 800 grit which lasts about
one stroke. :)

OOOOOOMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM.........


Oh, sure, raise the ante. But I said "to get a nod from the Zen
Masters," not to become one.

I've used 1200 grit wet, and if you use a drop of dishwashing soap in
the sanding water bucket, it doesn't clog. Produces a finish about as
smooth as polished marble.

I've known people that used a non-wax rubbing compound (2000 grit?
2400?) prior to final coat(s) but that seems a bit over the top to me.
But then I'm not claiming to be a Zen Master myself. For one thing, I
can't meditate over my brushes....

DSK


Short Wave Sportfishing December 27th 04 02:27 PM

On Mon, 27 Dec 2004 09:18:55 -0500, DSK wrote:

If you want to get even a slight nod of approval from the Zen Varnish
Masters, you have to get up to 600 grit wet-sanding.



Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:
"Snatch the sandpaper from my hand Grasshopper"... :)

A true Master of Sen Vanishing would use 800 grit which lasts about
one stroke. :)

OOMMMMMMMMMMMMM.........OOOOMM


Oh, sure, raise the ante. But I said "to get a nod from the Zen
Masters," not to become one.

I've used 1200 grit wet, and if you use a drop of dishwashing soap in
the sanding water bucket, it doesn't clog. Produces a finish about as
smooth as polished marble.


Wow - you are a true Master!!! I didn't know that.

I've known people that used a non-wax rubbing compound (2000 grit?
2400?) prior to final coat(s) but that seems a bit over the top to me.


It's 2000 I think. 3M makes one for fiberglass repair - amazing
stuff.

But then I'm not claiming to be a Zen Master myself. For one thing, I
can't meditate over my brushes...


A true Master of Zen Varnish knows his limitations.

OOOOOOOOOOMMMMMMMMMMMMM.........

Later,

Tom



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