I remember from a woodworking class back in the 60s that at one time
ethylene glycol (antifreeze)was used to prevent checking in the end grain of
fresh sawn lumber. I have been using it on poplar that I have been sawing
all summer and it seem to work OK, but I still get some cracking, especially
in one inch boards, and wonder what the best/economical/readily available
product is. I can buy antifreeze anywhere but I'll have to order and wait
on shipping for another product.
TIA
QL
QWeaver wrote:
> I remember from a woodworking class back in the 60s that at one time
> ethylene glycol (antifreeze)was used to prevent checking in the end grain of
> fresh sawn lumber. I have been using it on poplar that I have been sawing
> all summer and it seem to work OK, but I still get some cracking, especially
> in one inch boards, and wonder what the best/economical/readily available
> product is. I can buy antifreeze anywhere but I'll have to order and wait
> on shipping for another product.
> TIA
> QL
>
>
AnchorSeal from U. C. Coatings.
https://www.uccoatings.com/uccoat.php
--
Jack Novak
Buffalo, NY - USA
[email protected]
(Remove -SPAM- to send email)
FWIW - antifreeze is very nasty stuff to have around - animals will
lick it cause it tastes sweet - destroys their nervous system - gets
into drinking water when filtering through the earth. May take a few
years but this stuff is bad news. Worked on a project building a
schooner in Milwaukee - our mast stock was coated with a heavy wax like
substance which was very similiar to paraffin - worked well apparently.
I used a can of left over melamine paint and it worked very well. Cheers, JG
QWeaver wrote:
> I remember from a woodworking class back in the 60s that at one time
> ethylene glycol (antifreeze)was used to prevent checking in the end grain of
> fresh sawn lumber. I have been using it on poplar that I have been sawing
> all summer and it seem to work OK, but I still get some cracking, especially
> in one inch boards, and wonder what the best/economical/readily available
> product is. I can buy antifreeze anywhere but I'll have to order and wait
> on shipping for another product.
> TIA
> QL
On Fri, 16 Dec 2005 09:42:34 +0000, Andy Dingley
<[email protected]> wrote:
>On 15 Dec 2005 13:02:22 -0800, "butch burton" <[email protected]>
>wrote:
>
>>FWIW - antifreeze is very nasty stuff to have around - animals will
>>lick it cause it tastes sweet - destroys their nervous system -
>
>That's a good warning. There are propylene glycol antifreezes though
>that are much safer for this, rather than the ethylene glycols.
I have had good luck using a liquid made of mineral spirits or
turpentine with parafin wax disolved in it by heating. The parafin
will stay disolved in the solvent even after cooling. When the mix is
painted on the end cut the solvent evaporates leaving a parafin seal.
I have used up to a 60/40 mix of solvent/parafin with good results.
Obviously be very careful when heatng the mixture as it is flammable.
On 15 Dec 2005 13:02:22 -0800, "butch burton" <[email protected]>
wrote:
>FWIW - antifreeze is very nasty stuff to have around - animals will
>lick it cause it tastes sweet - destroys their nervous system -
That's a good warning. There are propylene glycol antifreezes though
that are much safer for this, rather than the ethylene glycols.
On Thu, 15 Dec 2005 18:33:09 GMT, "QWeaver" <[email protected]> wrote:
>I remember from a woodworking class back in the 60s that at one time
>ethylene glycol (antifreeze)was used to prevent checking in the end grain of
>fresh sawn lumber.
Poly (*) glycols of high molecular weight. Polyethylene glycol or
increasingly polypropylene glycol. Monomer glycols (e.g. antifreeze)
are useless.
Secondly this is an immobile substitute for water, not an end sealer. If
you just want to seal the end grain to reduce drying speed then use
something mor eimpermeable instead. Best is probably an emulsified wax
like Endseal or Anchorseal.
I use a mix of parafin and turpentine (paint thinner). heat and mix, thin
enough to brush on while warm, and let it set. I have several cedar planks
that I sealed this way and got no checking at all.
"QWeaver" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:FFiof.32826$Wo2.24326@trnddc04...
>I remember from a woodworking class back in the 60s that at one time
>ethylene glycol (antifreeze)was used to prevent checking in the end grain
>of fresh sawn lumber. I have been using it on poplar that I have been
>sawing all summer and it seem to work OK, but I still get some cracking,
>especially in one inch boards, and wonder what the best/economical/readily
>available product is. I can buy antifreeze anywhere but I'll have to order
>and wait on shipping for another product.
> TIA
> QL
>