I am in the process of finishing up a "refinishing" dinning table. I
am trying to wait for a coat of poly to become fully cured before I
sand it one more time and apply the last thich coat of poly on it (and
then wait another month to rub polish it). Someone comes along sprayed
a coat of pledge lemon spray on it. I am under the impression that
Pledge comes with sillicon and is going to create a "fish eye" problem
when I put on another coat of poly.
My questions are:
- Is this true that Pledge comes with sillicon and is going to become
a problem with another coat of poly finish?
- How should I remove it? Of course, I have already tried using
household cleaner. But I am afraid that this may not be enough.
Please help! Thanks.
Jay Chan
Stoutman wrote:
> "Jay Chan" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
> >I am in the process of finishing up a "refinishing" dinning table. I
> > am trying to wait for a coat of poly to become fully cured before I
> > sand it one more time and apply the last thich coat of poly on it (and
> > then wait another month to rub polish it). Someone comes along sprayed
> > a coat of pledge lemon spray on it. I am under the impression that
> > Pledge comes with sillicon and is going to create a "fish eye" problem
> > when I put on another coat of poly.
> >
> > My questions are:
> >
> > - Is this true that Pledge comes with sillicon and is going to become
> > a problem with another coat of poly finish?
> >
> > - How should I remove it? Of course, I have already tried using
> > household cleaner. But I am afraid that this may not be enough.
> >
> > Please help! Thanks.
> >
> > Jay Chan
> >
>
> Because all of your wood pores are sealed at this point you should be ok.
> Wipe the table (silicone oil is oil soluble, not water soluble) with a rag
> dampened with mineral spirits. This will dissolve any of the pledge
> silicone oil residue. Repeat this process 2-3 times. You should be fine!
> (This will NOT effect your poly you already have on the table that is
> cured).
>
> --
> Stoutman
> www.garagewoodworks.com
Thanks for the good tip. I will try removing the silicone using
mineral spirits as soon as I get back home.
Jay Chan
B A R R Y wrote:
> On 14 Jan 2007 11:01:08 -0800, "Jay Chan" <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
> >
> >- Is this true that Pledge comes with sillicon and is going to become
> >a problem with another coat of poly finish?
>
> It's silicon_e_, not sand, or the stuff they make memory chips from.
>
> >- How should I remove it?
>
> You don't. Seal it in with a coat of dewaxed shellac, sold in good
> paint stores as Zinnser Seal Coat, and apply the poly over it. Zinnser
> clear shellac in spray cans is also dewaxed.
>
> Normal Zinnser brush-on clear and orange shellac is NOT dewaxed, so
> it's not suitable under polyurethane.
>
> Shellac dries fast and is a bit different to use than a typical
> polyurethane varnish. Try it on the underside of the table or scrap
> wood to get the hang of it, or spring for the spray cans. If you do
> brush it on, you can clean the brush with SLX Denatured Alcohol, or
> let it harden and soak it in alcohol before the next use. Most
> disposable foam brushes are also suitable for applying seal coat.
>
> Apply a coat of shellac, let dry a few hours, then apply the first
> coat of poly. After the poly dries for a day or two, _lightly_ scuff
> it with 400 grit sand paper and a sanding block, remove the dust with
> a tack rag, and apply the finish coat.
I will try using mineral spirits to dissolve the Pledge first. If this
is not good enough, I will spray a coat of dewaxed shellac over the
surface. Thanks for the suggestion.
Jay Chan
Nova wrote:
> Jay Chan wrote:
>
> >
> > My questions are:
> >
> > - Is this true that Pledge comes with sillicon and is going to become
> > a problem with another coat of poly finish?
>
> The MSDS for Lemon Pledge shows:
>
> Ingredient Name: DIMETHYL POLYSILOXANE (MONOMER: DIMETHYL SILOXANE),
> SILICONE FLUID, DOW CORNING 200, POLYMETHYLSILOXANE *98-1*
>
> --
> Jack Novak
> Buffalo, NY - USA
> [email protected]
Somehow, I cannot find this info in the can, nor in the product-feature
page in their web site. Thanks for finding this info for me.
Jay Chan
Stoutman wrote:
> >
> > Thanks for the good tip. I will try removing the silicone using
> > mineral spirits as soon as I get back home.
> >
> > Jay Chan
> >
>
> And of course do this in a well ventilated area.
And that is the thing. The cold weather outside forces me to keep the
window closed. And I can use mineral spirits to clean the table for
only one time in this evening. I will do this again two more times
when the weather becomes nicer. Anyway, I can see that the mineral
spirits is able to remove most if not all the Pledge even after only
one cleaning. Thanks for the good tip.
Jay Chan
"Jay Chan" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I am in the process of finishing up a "refinishing" dinning table. I
> am trying to wait for a coat of poly to become fully cured before I
> sand it one more time and apply the last thich coat of poly on it (and
> then wait another month to rub polish it). Someone comes along sprayed
> a coat of pledge lemon spray on it. I am under the impression that
> Pledge comes with sillicon and is going to create a "fish eye" problem
> when I put on another coat of poly.
>
> My questions are:
>
> - Is this true that Pledge comes with sillicon and is going to become
> a problem with another coat of poly finish?
>
> - How should I remove it? Of course, I have already tried using
> household cleaner. But I am afraid that this may not be enough.
>
> Please help! Thanks.
>
> Jay Chan
>
Because all of your wood pores are sealed at this point you should be ok.
Wipe the table (silicone oil is oil soluble, not water soluble) with a rag
dampened with mineral spirits. This will dissolve any of the pledge
silicone oil residue. Repeat this process 2-3 times. You should be fine!
(This will NOT effect your poly you already have on the table that is
cured).
--
Stoutman
www.garagewoodworks.com
sweet sawdust wrote:
> No this was definitely a poly. Deft had provided it to the University for
> testing. And test it we did, this was the latest and greatest finish out
> there and we tried everything with it. Spraying, air drying, Micro waving
> (you should have seen the microwave, home made by the eng, dept. you could
> put a small table in it.), baking, pressure injecting the works. Those were
> fun classes.
Good thing you tested it. <G>
Imagine the marriages you saved!
Thanks for the story.
A little off subject but not much. Many years ago when Pledge with lemon oil
first came out and Deft (the prefered poly in my area at the time) was just
beginning to be used you could not mix them. Even after many days of drying
and a good coat of Johnsons the Pledge would strip the Deft right off the
furniture. I and several of my fellow students found this out the hard way.
We had just finished projects for a class and before turning them over to
the Profs for grading we Pledged them. Finishes went all splotchy and
spotty where the Pledge had removed the finish. Have tried Pledge with
lemon oil since then and it doesn't seem to cause a problem but it sure did
when pledge first came out.
"Jay Chan" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I am in the process of finishing up a "refinishing" dinning table. I
> am trying to wait for a coat of poly to become fully cured before I
> sand it one more time and apply the last thich coat of poly on it (and
> then wait another month to rub polish it). Someone comes along sprayed
> a coat of pledge lemon spray on it. I am under the impression that
> Pledge comes with sillicon and is going to create a "fish eye" problem
> when I put on another coat of poly.
>
> My questions are:
>
> - Is this true that Pledge comes with sillicon and is going to become
> a problem with another coat of poly finish?
>
> - How should I remove it? Of course, I have already tried using
> household cleaner. But I am afraid that this may not be enough.
>
> Please help! Thanks.
>
> Jay Chan
>
sweet sawdust wrote:
> A little off subject but not much. Many years ago when Pledge with lemon oil
> first came out and Deft (the prefered poly in my area at the time) was just
> beginning to be used you could not mix them.
Deft is most famous for brushing lacquer. Lacquer is redissolved by
solvent. Varnishes, including polyurethane varnishes, go through a
chemical reaction when they cure and are not able to be redissolved by
their original solvent.
Could the product that original Pledge was removing actually have been
Deft lacquer and not a polyurethane varnish at all, hence the confusion
and problems?
Jay Chan wrote:
>
> My questions are:
>
> - Is this true that Pledge comes with sillicon and is going to become
> a problem with another coat of poly finish?
The MSDS for Lemon Pledge shows:
Ingredient Name: DIMETHYL POLYSILOXANE (MONOMER: DIMETHYL SILOXANE),
SILICONE FLUID, DOW CORNING 200, POLYMETHYLSILOXANE *98-1*
--
Jack Novak
Buffalo, NY - USA
[email protected]
No this was definitely a poly. Deft had provided it to the University for
testing. And test it we did, this was the latest and greatest finish out
there and we tried everything with it. Spraying, air drying, Micro waving
(you should have seen the microwave, home made by the eng, dept. you could
put a small table in it.), baking, pressure injecting the works. Those were
fun classes.
"B A R R Y" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> sweet sawdust wrote:
>> A little off subject but not much. Many years ago when Pledge with lemon
>> oil first came out and Deft (the prefered poly in my area at the time)
>> was just beginning to be used you could not mix them.
>
> Deft is most famous for brushing lacquer. Lacquer is redissolved by
> solvent. Varnishes, including polyurethane varnishes, go through a
> chemical reaction when they cure and are not able to be redissolved by
> their original solvent.
>
> Could the product that original Pledge was removing actually have been
> Deft lacquer and not a polyurethane varnish at all, hence the confusion
> and problems?
On 14 Jan 2007 11:01:08 -0800, "Jay Chan" <[email protected]>
wrote:
>
>- Is this true that Pledge comes with sillicon and is going to become
>a problem with another coat of poly finish?
It's silicon_e_, not sand, or the stuff they make memory chips from.
>- How should I remove it?
You don't. Seal it in with a coat of dewaxed shellac, sold in good
paint stores as Zinnser Seal Coat, and apply the poly over it. Zinnser
clear shellac in spray cans is also dewaxed.
Normal Zinnser brush-on clear and orange shellac is NOT dewaxed, so
it's not suitable under polyurethane.
Shellac dries fast and is a bit different to use than a typical
polyurethane varnish. Try it on the underside of the table or scrap
wood to get the hang of it, or spring for the spray cans. If you do
brush it on, you can clean the brush with SLX Denatured Alcohol, or
let it harden and soak it in alcohol before the next use. Most
disposable foam brushes are also suitable for applying seal coat.
Apply a coat of shellac, let dry a few hours, then apply the first
coat of poly. After the poly dries for a day or two, _lightly_ scuff
it with 400 grit sand paper and a sanding block, remove the dust with
a tack rag, and apply the finish coat.
I