NN

"NOSPAM"

06/04/2008 7:36 PM

What finish for my homemade mallet?

Howdy all,

I just finished my first attempt at a wooden mallet (round head) to
occasionally use around my shop. Its nothing fancy, mainly for utility - I'm
thinking I'll use it mostly for assembly and some light work with my wooden
handled bench chisels when needed.

I suppose I could just leave it unfinished, but I remember reading somewhere
about a mallet maker who dipped their mallets for upwards of a month in
Linseed oil to penetrate the wood and ad some heft. I'm contemplating doing
this, but I'm looking for a few other opinions and ones which wont transfer
the finish to the wood I'm tapping.

I'm not overly interested in how it ultimately looks, rather I'd like
something that might increase the mallets resistance to drying out over time
and help it hold up to use.

I could just rub the linseed oil in as that's what I'm use to on the handles
of my other tools, but I'm wondering if soaking it for an extended period of
time would penetrate a bit deeper.

Also, can anyone suggest other options to Linseed oil that would give a
"harder" finish to the wood? Would tung oil or polyurethane better increase
its resilience to impacts? Can you recommend a brand name I can ask for?

-thanks in advance


This topic has 4 replies

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Andy Dingley

in reply to "NOSPAM" on 06/04/2008 7:36 PM

07/04/2008 6:13 AM

On 7 Apr, 00:36, "NOSPAM" <[email protected]> wrote:

> Also, can anyone suggest other options to Linseed oil that would give a
> "harder" finish to the wood?

Danish oil. That's largely oil, with a short amount of varnish added.
Good finish for tools.

tn

tiredofspam

in reply to "NOSPAM" on 06/04/2008 7:36 PM

06/04/2008 9:49 PM

You can't use poly. It will crack off.

Oil based is your best bet. Either soak it or just rub it on.
My opinion is to just rub it on and let it dry. Soaking it, it will
never dry, like some of my wood clamps.They don't stick to anything but
they always leave oil behind.

NOSPAM wrote:
> Howdy all,
>
> I just finished my first attempt at a wooden mallet (round head) to
> occasionally use around my shop. Its nothing fancy, mainly for utility - I'm
> thinking I'll use it mostly for assembly and some light work with my wooden
> handled bench chisels when needed.
>
> I suppose I could just leave it unfinished, but I remember reading somewhere
> about a mallet maker who dipped their mallets for upwards of a month in
> Linseed oil to penetrate the wood and ad some heft. I'm contemplating doing
> this, but I'm looking for a few other opinions and ones which wont transfer
> the finish to the wood I'm tapping.
>
> I'm not overly interested in how it ultimately looks, rather I'd like
> something that might increase the mallets resistance to drying out over time
> and help it hold up to use.
>
> I could just rub the linseed oil in as that's what I'm use to on the handles
> of my other tools, but I'm wondering if soaking it for an extended period of
> time would penetrate a bit deeper.
>
> Also, can anyone suggest other options to Linseed oil that would give a
> "harder" finish to the wood? Would tung oil or polyurethane better increase
> its resilience to impacts? Can you recommend a brand name I can ask for?
>
> -thanks in advance
>
>

ON

Otoe

in reply to "NOSPAM" on 06/04/2008 7:36 PM

07/04/2008 8:52 AM

On Sun, 6 Apr 2008 19:36:49 -0400, "NOSPAM" <[email protected]> wrote:

>Howdy all,
>
>I just finished my first attempt at a wooden mallet (round head) to
>occasionally use around my shop. Its nothing fancy, mainly for utility - I'm
>thinking I'll use it mostly for assembly and some light work with my wooden
>handled bench chisels when needed.
>
>I suppose I could just leave it unfinished, but I remember reading somewhere
>about a mallet maker who dipped their mallets for upwards of a month in
>Linseed oil to penetrate the wood and ad some heft. I'm contemplating doing
>this, but I'm looking for a few other opinions and ones which wont transfer
>the finish to the wood I'm tapping.
>
>I'm not overly interested in how it ultimately looks, rather I'd like
>something that might increase the mallets resistance to drying out over time
>and help it hold up to use.
>
>I could just rub the linseed oil in as that's what I'm use to on the handles
>of my other tools, but I'm wondering if soaking it for an extended period of
>time would penetrate a bit deeper.
>
>Also, can anyone suggest other options to Linseed oil that would give a
>"harder" finish to the wood? Would tung oil or polyurethane better increase
>its resilience to impacts? Can you recommend a brand name I can ask for?
>
>-thanks in advance
>

The new wood turning show used mineral oil. Wipe it on and reapply
when needed.

Otoe

GR

Gerald Ross

in reply to "NOSPAM" on 06/04/2008 7:36 PM

06/04/2008 8:36 PM

NOSPAM wrote:
> Howdy all,
>
> I just finished my first attempt at a wooden mallet (round head) to
> occasionally use around my shop. Its nothing fancy, mainly for utility - I'm
> thinking I'll use it mostly for assembly and some light work with my wooden
> handled bench chisels when needed.
>
> I suppose I could just leave it unfinished, but I remember reading somewhere
> about a mallet maker who dipped their mallets for upwards of a month in
> Linseed oil to penetrate the wood and ad some heft. I'm contemplating doing
> this, but I'm looking for a few other opinions and ones which wont transfer
> the finish to the wood I'm tapping.
>
> I'm not overly interested in how it ultimately looks, rather I'd like
> something that might increase the mallets resistance to drying out over time
> and help it hold up to use.
>
> I could just rub the linseed oil in as that's what I'm use to on the handles
> of my other tools, but I'm wondering if soaking it for an extended period of
> time would penetrate a bit deeper.
>
> Also, can anyone suggest other options to Linseed oil that would give a
> "harder" finish to the wood? Would tung oil or polyurethane better increase
> its resilience to impacts? Can you recommend a brand name I can ask for?
>
> -thanks in advance
>
>
See replies on March 30.

--
Gerald Ross
Cochran, GA

It is not enough to succeed. Others
must fail.




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