PP

Philip Procter

02/07/2004 4:05 AM

Which 'Tung Oils' are real?

Are any of the products which call themselves Tung Oil actually tung
oil? Most seem to be thinned varnish, which I can make myself quite
cheaply!

Philip


This topic has 6 replies

Gg

"George"

in reply to Philip Procter on 02/07/2004 4:05 AM

02/07/2004 6:56 AM

The ones declaring themselves 100% tung oil, otherwise, suit city. Now tung
oil finishes of various types abound. As noted elsewhere, they usually
contain thinners to make them flow better, driers to make them cure faster,
and perhaps resins of different sorts to make the film more wear-resistant.

"Philip Procter" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Are any of the products which call themselves Tung Oil actually tung
> oil? Most seem to be thinned varnish, which I can make myself quite
> cheaply!
>
> Philip

Mm

Mike

in reply to Philip Procter on 02/07/2004 4:05 AM

02/07/2004 10:00 AM

In article <[email protected]>,
[email protected] says...
> Are any of the products which call themselves Tung Oil actually tung
> oil? Most seem to be thinned varnish, which I can make myself quite
> cheaply!
>
> Philip
>
If one believes the descriptions given by the maker, and in this case I
do, Tried and True finishes use and or are, depending on which type you
get, real tung oil and real natural resins in their finishes that use
resins.


--
MikeG
Heirloom Woods
www.heirloom-woods.net
[email protected]

cC

[email protected] (Chris Richmond - MD6-FDC ~)

in reply to Philip Procter on 02/07/2004 4:05 AM

02/07/2004 4:14 PM

In article <[email protected]>,
Mike <[email protected]> writes:
>In article <[email protected]>,
>[email protected] says...
>> Are any of the products which call themselves Tung Oil actually tung
>> oil? Most seem to be thinned varnish, which I can make myself quite
>>
>If one believes the descriptions given by the maker, and in this case I
>do, Tried and True finishes use and or are, depending on which type you
>get, real tung oil and real natural resins in their finishes that use
>resins.

Not to pick nits, but I thought they were using truely boiled linseed
oil, bees wax, and resins in the varnish oil product. Not sure
about the danish oil. I've only used the varnish oil and like it
a lot.

Chris

--
Chris Richmond | I don't speak for Intel & vise versa

Dd

Daniel

in reply to Philip Procter on 02/07/2004 4:05 AM

02/07/2004 2:01 PM

http://www.leevalley.com/wood/page.asp?page=20049&category=1,190,42942

Philip Procter wrote:
> Are any of the products which call themselves Tung Oil actually tung
> oil? Most seem to be thinned varnish, which I can make myself quite
> cheaply!
>
> Philip

fF

[email protected] (Fred the Red Shirt)

in reply to Philip Procter on 02/07/2004 4:05 AM

02/07/2004 11:34 AM

B a r r y <[email protected]> wrote in message news:<[email protected]>...
> On Fri, 02 Jul 2004 04:05:35 GMT, Philip Procter
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> >Are any of the products which call themselves Tung Oil actually tung
> >oil?

IMHE, all of them. The tung oil that is not tung oil appears to
be a myth popularized by Bob Flexner in _Understandign Wood Finshes_.

Tung oil _finishes_ may have little tung oil in them, but equating
tung oil finish with tung oil makes as much sense as equating
lates paint with latex.

Mind you, I do recommend Flexnor and his books, just with some
reservations as he is not a chemist (nor am I but I have done
lab work and had some safety training) and he tends to not be
clear on what is a matter of (his) taste vs fact.

Flexnor's strength is in explaining what to do to get specific
results, and how to do it as simply as possible. That is what
he promises in his books, and he delivers.

--

FF

Ba

B a r r y

in reply to Philip Procter on 02/07/2004 4:05 AM

02/07/2004 10:44 AM

On Fri, 02 Jul 2004 04:05:35 GMT, Philip Procter
<[email protected]> wrote:

>Are any of the products which call themselves Tung Oil actually tung
>oil?

Hope's Tung Oil (_not_ their Tung Oil Finish)

Woodcraft 100% Tung Oil

Barry


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