Results 16 to 20 of 20
-
19th April 2010, 10:42 AM #16
Well! I sanded my little table top too 400# cos that's what I have. Mmmmmmmmmmmmmm! Silky. Been rubbing on shellac. Tricky stuff isn't it. Might have to get serious about rubbers and stuff. And have to get me some Traditional wax. But heh! I'm sold.
anne-maria.
Tea Lady
(White with none)
Follow my little workshop/gallery on facebook. things of clay and wood.
-
19th April 2010, 04:06 PM #17Senior Member
- Join Date
- Mar 2009
- Location
- Hobart
- Posts
- 410
With all due respect Neil to your expert knowledge, the use of coarse grade steel wool is the perfect medium when paint stripping wood with a painted surface to clean off the paint stripper and dead paint to get back to raw wood. Ditto, I usually clean off with either warm soapy water and/or with metho to neutralise the acid of the paint stripper and steel wool to get the final residual muck off.
Then obviously one needs to go through the various grades of sandpaper, and applying which ever finishing product one chooses. I only use ultra fine steel wool on coated timber (say more than 8 coats of shellac) before bees wax polishing or on the odd occasion have steel wooled down and waxed a finished tung oil surface to dull it off slightly.
I do agree that steel wool is no good as a sanding medium on raw wood.
-
19th April 2010, 04:08 PM #18Senior Member
- Join Date
- Mar 2009
- Location
- Hobart
- Posts
- 410
-
19th April 2010, 08:38 PM #19
Horsecroft88 - I have no problem with using course steel wool in stripping in fact I wholwheartedly recommend for this use. Don't have a problem with it being used over a finish.
What I said was: Steel wool shouldn't be used as a fine abrasive on raw timber.
Cheers - NeilKEEP A LID ON THE GARBAGE... Report spam, scams, and inappropriate posts, PMs and Blogs.
Use the Report icon at the bottom of all Posts, PM's and Blog entries.
-
20th April 2010, 10:03 AM #20Senior Member
- Join Date
- Mar 2009
- Location
- Hobart
- Posts
- 410
Bookmarks