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Thread: Sealer for MDF
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5th September 2005, 07:43 PM #1Senior Member
- Join Date
- Jul 2002
- Location
- Donvale, Vic
- Posts
- 17
Sealer for MDF
Just finished a CD unit for a family member, who, to reduce costs,asked me to use MDF. As it was for a temporary apartment they were renting , I agreed.
Finished unit, all pieces thoroughly sanded to 320 grit before joining, and sprayed with your El-cheapo paint cans. Four coats later, sanding lightly after each application, the MDF was still absorbing the paint ( or maybe, some paint and whatever was in the can) . I then hand painted it with some decent paint - they are happy, but to me, the job looked S***house
Had it been for something more permanent, I would have stared again.
Did a search of the BB, some suggest sealing MDF with a shellac/talcom powder mix.
1) Any one done this
2) What is a suitable mix of shellac & talc
thanks
mick
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5th September 2005, 08:07 PM #2
I haven't done it but I wonder if that wall board undercoat/sealer would be a good option as a first coat.
2nd option - lots of paintIf at first you don't succeed, give something else a go. Life is far too short to waste time trying.
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5th September 2005, 08:11 PM #3
Concrete is pretty good! MDF has to be the worst crap since asbestos. Avoid it at all costs.
If you can do it - Do it! If you can't do it - Try it!
Do both well!
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5th September 2005, 08:17 PM #4Supermod
- Join Date
- Jul 1999
- Location
- Brisbane, Qld.
- Age
- 48
- Posts
- 579
HAvn't done it, but you should have tried sealing with a can of the el-cheapo undercoat first, that would have helped.
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5th September 2005, 08:22 PM #5
I'm happy to be proven wrong, however I think you'll find that the talc/shellac combo is for sealing grain, prior to french polishing.
Straight shellac oughta help seal the mdf.
I reckon good sealing paint is the go though.Boring signature time again!
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5th September 2005, 08:32 PM #6
When I HAVE to use MDF, I use Dulux acrylic sealer/undercoat, let it dry for an hour or two and sand it back. If there are any bare patches, another coat, then one or (max) two top coats are sufficient. Saves loads of time and paint.
Cheers
Graeme
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5th September 2005, 10:47 PM #7
Use some fibre glass resin on the edges to stop them from soaking up the paint. If you coat the whole lot it'll make it water proof!
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5th September 2005, 11:23 PM #8
I used the MDF sealer made by Whiteknight Paints.......it worked pretty well but seemed to me that is was ordinary acrylic sealer/undercoat with most of the water sucked out.
if you always do as you have always done, you will always get what you have always got
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5th September 2005, 11:30 PM #9Originally Posted by graemet
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