matto1
22nd August 2008, 08:21 PM
I've done my homework on using linseed oil as a finish on a shipwrights/caulking mallet I am making for my old man. Ideally I would like to use raw linseed oil and apply it using the daily for a week, weekly for a month etc rule but I don't have time (it's for fathers day and I can't count on dad to keep up the regimen).
I understand that raw linseed oil doesn't contain the chemical drying agents that boiled linseed oil has and obviously takes a lot longer to dry. My question is this, can I use raw linseed oil to saturate the timber over a week or so and then seal it with boiled linseed oil over the top? Is there another better finish I could use instead for a mallet that will get beaten up and kept in a marine environment? I thought of simply using wax wax but I don't know how this would handle the moisture. The timber involved is Jarrah or red gum for the head and some mystery hardwood (possibly silver ash) for the handle.
Any thoughts would be appreciated.
Matto
I understand that raw linseed oil doesn't contain the chemical drying agents that boiled linseed oil has and obviously takes a lot longer to dry. My question is this, can I use raw linseed oil to saturate the timber over a week or so and then seal it with boiled linseed oil over the top? Is there another better finish I could use instead for a mallet that will get beaten up and kept in a marine environment? I thought of simply using wax wax but I don't know how this would handle the moisture. The timber involved is Jarrah or red gum for the head and some mystery hardwood (possibly silver ash) for the handle.
Any thoughts would be appreciated.
Matto