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16th November 2005, 12:04 AM #1Member
- Join Date
- Feb 2004
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- 9
Organol Hard Burnishing Oil on Jarrah burl
I recently finished a piece of Jarrah burl with Organol Hard Burninshig Oil. I followed the instrucitons carfully and finished off by burnishing with a lambswool cloth to produce a nice sheen finish. Now a week later the finish is going off and reverting to the state before the burnishing. Any comment or advice would be appreciated.
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16th November 2005, 12:58 AM #2Member
- Join Date
- Apr 2005
- Location
- Perth
- Age
- 57
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- 0
Hey wolfs,
I am not sure but have used the same finish on two pieces I built so will watch and see what transpires here.
Cheers,
Buz
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16th November 2005, 07:32 AM #3
Some possibilities:
Wood was not dry enough
Not fine enough grit on final sanding
Try finishing again with final grit and see if it holds.
I use shellawax now with a buff (on Festool Rotex in rotary mode) to achieve the same finish in much less time with a lot less effort.
A drill with a buffing wheel should achieve the same result using a swansdown mop.Stupidity kills. Absolute stupidity kills absolutely.
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16th November 2005, 11:00 AM #4Senior Member
- Join Date
- Dec 2004
- Location
- Margaret River, Australia
- Posts
- 103
Wolfs, do a search on threads discussing finishing with organoil. There's been a lot of discussion / debate about "problems" with organoil finishes. You think you're going to get this nice satin finish which shows off the beautiful wood grain (like a Jarrah Burl!). Then you end up with a flat dead look. That's why I shifted across to lacquer. Or sometimes Danish oils or Oil/Poly mixes like Feast Watson Floorseal. I know people who persevere with the organoils, but it means days / weeks of slog before you end up getting anywhere near the finish you're chasing (but still not as nice as a 40 gloss lacquer, or French Polish, or oil/poly type Danish, or Ubeaut EEE Ultrashine, etc etc). Life is too short for organoils, IMHO.
Richard
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16th November 2005, 12:20 PM #5
Organoil needs to go down to about 2000 grit, I tend to put the article away for a while and bring it out again at the stage that you are talking about and run over it again with the 2000 dry. After a while it stops reverting to the flat look and maintains its shine.
While it does take effort pure oil finishes are able to do things that no lacquer/poly type mix can ever hope to.
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16th November 2005, 11:23 PM #6Member
- Join Date
- Feb 2004
- Posts
- 9
Thanks for the infomation guys. I will try dry sanding with 2000 grit as suggested by PAH1.
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