yabbyman
26th July 2006, 05:31 PM
Hi all
as a few of you have gathered, I am a babe in the woods when it comes to woodwork mastery and I am in a quandry.
Prior to relocating to Sydney from the Atherton Tablelands in FNQ, I had the good opportunity of picking up 2 beautiful slabs of black bean. (Castanospremum australe) Ideally I would like to utilise the bigger slab as the "master" section of a table top and join on 2 additional heartwood pieces on either side to emphasis the light sapwood. The Master section also has a hole and one crack that goes right through the 50mm depth of the timber. My initial idea was to fill these with transparent potting resin prior to undertaking any work on the surfaces.
This is where my problem goes west and I need to pick you guys brains' to establish which way I should go.
The general consensus is that any joinery work will have movement, therefore a polyurethane high gloss finish is not the answer as it will exacerbate the problem and potentially ruin a great surface.
Therefore I am lead to believe that finishing the table surface with say, Feast Watson Floor Finish with multiple coats to bring up a gloss prior to buffing back.
BUT.... from what I can gather (a little bit of common logic for once) is that this FW finish will not effectively adhere to the resin surface of the holes and crack.
In an ideal world I would just cut the crap square into a one piece rectangle, though I would only get 800mm wide. Too narrow for the purpose. (Errrr)
Which way do you guys think I should go?
I certainly do not want to destroy waste such a beautiful project.
Any thoughts greatly appreciated A
as a few of you have gathered, I am a babe in the woods when it comes to woodwork mastery and I am in a quandry.
Prior to relocating to Sydney from the Atherton Tablelands in FNQ, I had the good opportunity of picking up 2 beautiful slabs of black bean. (Castanospremum australe) Ideally I would like to utilise the bigger slab as the "master" section of a table top and join on 2 additional heartwood pieces on either side to emphasis the light sapwood. The Master section also has a hole and one crack that goes right through the 50mm depth of the timber. My initial idea was to fill these with transparent potting resin prior to undertaking any work on the surfaces.
This is where my problem goes west and I need to pick you guys brains' to establish which way I should go.
The general consensus is that any joinery work will have movement, therefore a polyurethane high gloss finish is not the answer as it will exacerbate the problem and potentially ruin a great surface.
Therefore I am lead to believe that finishing the table surface with say, Feast Watson Floor Finish with multiple coats to bring up a gloss prior to buffing back.
BUT.... from what I can gather (a little bit of common logic for once) is that this FW finish will not effectively adhere to the resin surface of the holes and crack.
In an ideal world I would just cut the crap square into a one piece rectangle, though I would only get 800mm wide. Too narrow for the purpose. (Errrr)
Which way do you guys think I should go?
I certainly do not want to destroy waste such a beautiful project.
Any thoughts greatly appreciated A