I am doing some cleaning up on my boat. It is an old beater, but I want it
to look nicer. I want to select some wood that will last to make a couple
of trays to sit fishing hardware, or to put in a hole for a drink holder.
The boat will be kept under a shade and a cover, and not left in the
weather. Is there a wood that I can buy without going to a specialty store,
say the oak at Home Depot? I need less than 4 board feet, and that is
counting on using 1/2" thick materials. Of course, the sealer would be
important. I have Varathane clear.
Thanks.
Steve
On Tue, 5 Jun 2012 20:20:02 -0400, "Mike Marlow"
<[email protected]> wrote:
>Richard wrote:
>
>>
>>
>> Sorry Mike, but there is no such thing as zero maintenance in the boat
>> world. :)
>>
>>
>
>Boat - a hole in the water that you pour money into...
BOAT is actually an acronym: "Bring out another thousand"
"Keith Nuttle" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On 6/5/2012 2:38 PM, Steve B wrote:
>> I am doing some cleaning up on my boat. It is an old beater, but I want
>> it
>> to look nicer. I want to select some wood that will last to make a
>> couple
>> of trays to sit fishing hardware, or to put in a hole for a drink holder.
>>
>> The boat will be kept under a shade and a cover, and not left in the
>> weather. Is there a wood that I can buy without going to a specialty
>> store,
>> say the oak at Home Depot? I need less than 4 board feet, and that is
>> counting on using 1/2" thick materials. Of course, the sealer would be
>> important. I have Varathane clear.
>>
>> Thanks.
>>
>> Steve
>>
>>
> I have found mahogany at Lowes.
Which mahogany was it, most likely it was lauan mahogany, which has no
resemblance to real mahogany except for a brownish-red color.
On Tue, 5 Jun 2012 11:38:31 -0700, "Steve B" <[email protected]> wrote:
>I am doing some cleaning up on my boat. It is an old beater, but I want it
>to look nicer. I want to select some wood that will last to make a couple
>of trays to sit fishing hardware, or to put in a hole for a drink holder.
>
>The boat will be kept under a shade and a cover, and not left in the
>weather. Is there a wood that I can buy without going to a specialty store,
>say the oak at Home Depot? I need less than 4 board feet, and that is
>counting on using 1/2" thick materials. Of course, the sealer would be
>important. I have Varathane clear.
>
>Thanks.
>
>Steve
>
cypress?
skeez
Steve B wrote:
> I am doing some cleaning up on my boat. It is an old beater, but I
> want it to look nicer. I want to select some wood that will last to
> make a couple of trays to sit fishing hardware, or to put in a hole
> for a drink holder.
> The boat will be kept under a shade and a cover, and not left in the
> weather. Is there a wood that I can buy without going to a specialty
> store, say the oak at Home Depot? I need less than 4 board feet, and
> that is counting on using 1/2" thick materials. Of course, the
> sealer would be important. I have Varathane clear.
>
Undertaking a very similar task with my son Steve, we are leaning towards
the composite decking material. Zero maintenance. Seems like it would make
a good fit in a boat. Interested to hear how your decision process plays
out.
--
-Mike-
[email protected]
On 6/5/2012 2:22 PM, Mike Marlow wrote:
> Steve B wrote:
>> I am doing some cleaning up on my boat. It is an old beater, but I
>> want it to look nicer. I want to select some wood that will last to
>> make a couple of trays to sit fishing hardware, or to put in a hole
>> for a drink holder.
>> The boat will be kept under a shade and a cover, and not left in the
>> weather. Is there a wood that I can buy without going to a specialty
>> store, say the oak at Home Depot? I need less than 4 board feet, and
>> that is counting on using 1/2" thick materials. Of course, the
>> sealer would be important. I have Varathane clear.
>>
>
> Undertaking a very similar task with my son Steve, we are leaning towards
> the composite decking material. Zero maintenance. Seems like it would make
> a good fit in a boat. Interested to hear how your decision process plays
> out.
>
Sorry Mike, but there is no such thing as zero maintenance in the boat
world. :)
break
Steve, before the Varathane goes on, consider epoxy coating ala West
System?
Three coats of that - washed and sanded smooth between coats -
then the varnish for UV protection...
http://www.wessex-resins.com/westsystem/use-guides.html
Richard wrote:
>
>
> Sorry Mike, but there is no such thing as zero maintenance in the boat
> world. :)
>
>
Boat - a hole in the water that you pour money into...
--
-Mike-
[email protected]
I have a 1950 cedar lapstrake front deck mahogany that I did with epoxy 2
coats and then spar varnish it sometimes sits uncovered for days it has
stood up very well. Epoxy needs to be covered it will not take kindly to uv.
Sal
"Steve B" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I am doing some cleaning up on my boat. It is an old beater, but I want it
>to look nicer. I want to select some wood that will last to make a couple
>of trays to sit fishing hardware, or to put in a hole for a drink holder.
>
> The boat will be kept under a shade and a cover, and not left in the
> weather. Is there a wood that I can buy without going to a specialty
> store, say the oak at Home Depot? I need less than 4 board feet, and that
> is counting on using 1/2" thick materials. Of course, the sealer would be
> important. I have Varathane clear.
>
> Thanks.
>
> Steve
>
>
White oak is very rot resistant.
I think cedar , mohogany, and teak are like wise.
What about marine grade ply?
My thinking on boats is epoxy finish then spar finish over epoxy.
But then again, I have not built a boat.
On 6/5/2012 2:38 PM, Steve B wrote:
> I am doing some cleaning up on my boat. It is an old beater, but I want it
> to look nicer. I want to select some wood that will last to make a couple
> of trays to sit fishing hardware, or to put in a hole for a drink holder.
>
> The boat will be kept under a shade and a cover, and not left in the
> weather. Is there a wood that I can buy without going to a specialty store,
> say the oak at Home Depot? I need less than 4 board feet, and that is
> counting on using 1/2" thick materials. Of course, the sealer would be
> important. I have Varathane clear.
>
> Thanks.
>
> Steve
>
>
Steve B wrote:
> I am doing some cleaning up on my boat. It is an old beater, but I
> want it to look nicer. I want to select some wood that will last to
> make a couple of trays to sit fishing hardware, or to put in a hole
> for a drink holder.
> The boat will be kept under a shade and a cover, and not left in the
> weather. Is there a wood that I can buy without going to a specialty
> store, say the oak at Home Depot? I need less than 4 board feet, and
> that is counting on using 1/2" thick materials. Of course, the
> sealer would be important. I have Varathane clear.
Keep it top coated and you can use anything you want to use. You won't find
much beyond oak, poplar or birch at HD and the oak is red, not white.
Of course, teak is always nice and weathers well if you forget to top coat
sometime. Mahogany too, including African and Philippine (meranti).
--
dadiOH
____________________________
dadiOH's dandies v3.06...
...a help file of info about MP3s, recording from
LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that.
Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico
On 6/5/2012 2:38 PM, Steve B wrote:
> I am doing some cleaning up on my boat. It is an old beater, but I want it
> to look nicer. I want to select some wood that will last to make a couple
> of trays to sit fishing hardware, or to put in a hole for a drink holder.
>
> The boat will be kept under a shade and a cover, and not left in the
> weather. Is there a wood that I can buy without going to a specialty store,
> say the oak at Home Depot? I need less than 4 board feet, and that is
> counting on using 1/2" thick materials. Of course, the sealer would be
> important. I have Varathane clear.
>
> Thanks.
>
> Steve
>
>
I have found mahogany at Lowes. If you use Mahogany I would do a teak
oil finish rather than varnish or something similar. The oil finishes
need to be wiped on, at least once per year, but look nicer than varnish
as the age. Varnishes crack oils do not.
On Tue, 05 Jun 2012 11:38:31 -0700, Steve B wrote:
> I am doing some cleaning up on my boat. It is an old beater, but I want
> it to look nicer. I want to select some wood that will last to make a
> couple of trays to sit fishing hardware, or to put in a hole for a drink
> holder.
I'd be tempted to use cedar. If you want 1/2" material look through the
stacks of fence boards to find ones with enough clear pieces. They're
about 5/8" thick in most cases, but after you plane down the cedar to
smooth it (a thickness sander is best) you'll have about 1/2".
No matter which wood you wind up using, I'd seal all sides with SealCoat
and then add U/V resistant poly.
--
Intelligence is an experiment that failed - G. B. Shaw
On 6/5/2012 1:38 PM, Steve B wrote:
> I am doing some cleaning up on my boat. It is an old beater, but I want it
> to look nicer. I want to select some wood that will last to make a couple
> of trays to sit fishing hardware, or to put in a hole for a drink holder.
>
> The boat will be kept under a shade and a cover, and not left in the
> weather. Is there a wood that I can buy without going to a specialty store,
> say the oak at Home Depot? I need less than 4 board feet, and that is
> counting on using 1/2" thick materials. Of course, the sealer would be
> important. I have Varathane clear.
>
> Thanks.
>
> Steve
>
>
Heart grade redwood. IPe. Azek and other man mades. Teak. Real
mahogany. White oak (NOT red). Yellow pine. Western red cedar.
--
___________________________________
Keep the whole world singing . . .
Dan G
remove the seven