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12th June 2016, 03:40 PM #1
Waterbased Polyurethane over decking oil?
1. I have a couple of decks both at least partially exposed to weather. I gave them three coats of Minwax Decking Oil "Natural" which has a slight yellow tint for at least some UV protection. The tint is quite attractive in colour.
The timber for the decks is recycled mixed hardwood (60 yo old joists in one case and laminated fence palings in the other case). They were dressed and sanded. I filled as many cracks as viable with Sikaflex.
Well, the Minwax decking oil is next to useless for keeping out water and possum pee, so both sets of timbers have cracked and degraded within 6 months (where they get water sitting on them).
2. I have fairly recently had a handrail fitted to the back steps, and it was constructed from KD Blackbutt (not my choice). In this case I already knew that the MW oil was useless for water protection, so after 3 coats of that I applied several coats or water based Plyurethane to keep out as much water as possible. The finish was very nice and smooth and completely water resistant.....for a while.
However, I doubt the Blackbutt was properly dry (as is so often the case with big chain hardware timber), and it started cracking within a couple of weeks of being finished. The cracks somewhat defeated the purpose of the PU in keeping out water, and so the cracks got worse, particularly after the heavy rain of last weekend.
3. I had planned to take up both sets of deck boards and re-do them, applying PU (which is hell durable under foot). One of the deck boards had to be done before the rails went around the deck (BB rails as part of the hand rail). I sanded back and re-finished this board with 3 coats of oil, followed by 3 or 4 coats of PU. This particular board has been down for about 6-8 weeks now and shows no sign of deterioration whatsoever. It has been subjected to rain, sun and possum pee (which just wipes straight off without a trace). It has been in place for the same amount of time as the BB handrail which has started cracking apart.
4. As I was putting water based PU onto oil I had foreseen that it would not adhere very well without some sanding. The oil finish was lightly sanded with either 240 or 320 grit, and the PU went on very well without pooling or being patchy.
5. I am in the middle of doing the same treatment (oil + PU) to the 60 yo recycled cypress boards that are the palings ford the deck fence, going on to BB rails. Just to see what would happen I did a small area with PU over oil without sanding and it pooled as I expected. In this case using abrasive paper didn't work so well as it quickly got clogged making the disc useless after one or two boards (sander on lowest speed) so I used 00 steel wool instead, and have had good success in getting the PU to adhere. I left the oil finish to go off for about 8 days. It may be that I left the
single deck board to go off for up to two weeks - I can't remember.
So, the question is this: do you think that although the PU goes on successfully that it may still have long term adherence problems to the oil finish which won't show up for a while,
OR
is the good adherence an indication that it will be long term successful, and that the BB cracking is due to insufficient drying of the timber before being sold? It is my opinion that Spotted Gum would have been a much better choice than Blackbutt (I am going to do a test).
Sidenote: In the 6-8" of rain that we had last weekend that single deck board didn't even change colour a little bit, where the boards next to it (same species) went very dark with the water (the are oiled only).
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13th June 2016, 04:29 AM #2
Hi Brett
I'm not 100% sure of what you're trying to achieve, but if it's maintaining teh underlying timber colour and being "water impervious", perhaps the best -- I'm not claiming "cost effective" -- treatment is
2 or 3 coats of epoxy resin
followed by
3 or 4 coats of polyurathaneregards from Alberta, Canada
ian
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13th June 2016, 09:03 AM #3
Hi Ian
I'm using the tinted oil for some UV protection, and the PU for keeping out the water.
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13th June 2016, 01:52 PM #4
That's not how I understand that it's supposed to work
I always understood the process was supposed to be
1. install new deck
2. contractor / DIYer oils deck
3. rain and possum wee wash oil off deck leading to discoloured timber
4. re oil deck, this time with a stain added
5. rain and possum wee wash oil off deck
6. forget to oil deck after last shower (or Bunnings is out of deck oil)
7. deck deteriorates colour wise
8. fresh application of oil and stain doesn't bring colour back
9. jump onto WW forums and ask "what can I do?"
10. get lots of responses along the lines of "sand back to bare timber and start again, but this time keep up the oil"
11. repeat step 3 & 4 routine
12. now at 8, again
13. give up and lay new decking timber, this time fully intending to religiously do step 4 after every shower and possum party
14. go on holidays and miss step 4 again
15. sell house so deck becomes someone else's problem
maybe this should be filed under jokes.regards from Alberta, Canada
ian
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13th June 2016, 02:50 PM #5
Yeah you may be right, but I'll see how this works. It's not possible to keep up the oil (using this brand anyway) - it would need it once a month at a minimum. Certainly part of the problem is the brittleness of the recycled boards, but the PU seems to be holding up far better.
I'll have a better indication around the end of the year, but my main question right now is about the long term adherence of the PU to the oil. Early indications are good, but they are just that - early.
Fortunately it's screws throughout so dismantling for workshop work is easy.
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