Dd

"Doug"

15/04/2006 7:04 AM

Sticky finish problem

I built a white oak dinning table that I finished with water-based
poly. The surface of the table is extremely tacky now. I'm theorizing
that the water-based finish does not respond well to being cleaned.
Does anyone have any suggestions. At this point, I'm planning on
sanding down the table and refinishing with oil poly.


This topic has 5 replies

Dd

"Doug"

in reply to "Doug" on 15/04/2006 7:04 AM

15/04/2006 9:29 AM

-The table was stained with pigment gel stain first

-The poly was thinned and applied with a rag (6-7 coats)

-The finish dried fine

-The stickiness started about 8 weeks after use.

-The table has been cleaned with Murphy's oil soap, and nothing else.

GG

"George"

in reply to "Doug" on 15/04/2006 7:04 AM

15/04/2006 11:18 AM


"Roger amd Missy Behnke" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>A little more information would be helpful.
>
> 1. Was there any stain or dye used on the oak before the wb poly?
>
> 2. Did the finish dry well originally then turn sticky? If so, how long
> before it turned sticky?
>
> 3. If it never dried well, how long has it been since it was applied and
> what has the weather been like.
>
> 4. What has been used to clean the table and how soon after the finish
> dried was the first cleaning done?
>

F'rinstance, did you use something oil or wax-based on it?

JJ

JGS

in reply to "Doug" on 15/04/2006 7:04 AM

16/04/2006 6:28 AM

I have used WB poly on tables used in restaurants. A lot of cleaning over a
couple of years with strong cleaners and they still look fine. For those I
sprayed on a varathane product. JG

Doug wrote:

> I built a white oak dinning table that I finished with water-based
> poly. The surface of the table is extremely tacky now. I'm theorizing
> that the water-based finish does not respond well to being cleaned.
> Does anyone have any suggestions. At this point, I'm planning on
> sanding down the table and refinishing with oil poly.

Mm

Markem

in reply to "Doug" on 15/04/2006 7:04 AM

15/04/2006 12:51 PM

On 15 Apr 2006 09:29:01 -0700, "Doug" <[email protected]> wrote:

>-The table was stained with pigment gel stain first
>
>-The poly was thinned and applied with a rag (6-7 coats)
>
>-The finish dried fine
>
>-The stickiness started about 8 weeks after use.
>
>-The table has been cleaned with Murphy's oil soap, and nothing else.

I would tend to think Murphy's law applies to the Murphy's Oil soap
leaving a residue which is sticky, try cleaning the table with
something which won't damage the poly but is a solvent.

Mark
(sixoneeight) = 618

Ra

"Roger amd Missy Behnke"

in reply to "Doug" on 15/04/2006 7:04 AM

15/04/2006 10:35 AM

A little more information would be helpful.

1. Was there any stain or dye used on the oak before the wb poly?

2. Did the finish dry well originally then turn sticky? If so, how long
before it turned sticky?

3. If it never dried well, how long has it been since it was applied and
what has the weather been like.

4. What has been used to clean the table and how soon after the finish
dried was the first cleaning done?

Roger


"Doug" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I built a white oak dinning table that I finished with water-based
> poly. The surface of the table is extremely tacky now. I'm theorizing
> that the water-based finish does not respond well to being cleaned.
> Does anyone have any suggestions. At this point, I'm planning on
> sanding down the table and refinishing with oil poly.
>


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