t

03/09/2005 8:48 AM

What to do about Sap?

Greetings all!

I'm in the middle of a project that has taken longer than expected to
finish (what a surprise, eh?). Back in April I purchase a bunch of S2S
Spanish Cedar, and stacked it flat without stickers expecting that it
would not sit like that for more than a few weeks. Obviously it sat
longer than expected and some of the boards have leaked sap.

How do I clean this up? It's okay if it leaves marks, because the stain
is most likely hide them. I just need to clean up the "sticky" without
making the wood look worse.

Does this mean the wood is too green, or could this have been avoided
if I have stickered the stack?


Thanks,
Tom


This topic has 5 replies

t

in reply to [email protected] on 03/09/2005 8:48 AM

03/09/2005 8:51 AM

Oops, googled after the fact and found the same question from a few
years back. The suggestion was to use acetone or laquer thinner to
clean the sap.

I'd still appreciate ideas or comments from the currently active
members of the group.

Tom

CS

"Charlie Self"

in reply to [email protected] on 03/09/2005 8:48 AM

03/09/2005 10:01 AM


[email protected] wrote:
> Oops, googled after the fact and found the same question from a few
> years back. The suggestion was to use acetone or laquer thinner to
> clean the sap.
>
> I'd still appreciate ideas or comments from the currently active
> members of the group.
>
> Tom

I prefer acetone to lacquer thinner. Either will work well, but if you
restack the wood, sticker it. You may still run into the same problem.
I've had cedar (Eastern red) leak sap several times. It does eventually
seem to stop. I made my wife a musical jewelry box of cedar about
15-16-17 years ago, and it was a slight problem before I got done.
Cleaning it up twice was enough. It hasn't leaked sap since (or my wife
is cleaning it an not telling me).

t

in reply to [email protected] on 03/09/2005 8:48 AM

04/09/2005 3:38 PM

Thanks for the advice folks!!

Da

DIYGUY

in reply to [email protected] on 03/09/2005 8:48 AM

03/09/2005 12:36 PM

[email protected] wrote:
> Oops, googled after the fact and found the same question from a few
> years back. The suggestion was to use acetone or laquer thinner to
> clean the sap.
>
> I'd still appreciate ideas or comments from the currently active
> members of the group.
>
> Tom
>
Try turps before acetone. Works well for me and it usually doesn't
leave any stain. Good luck ...

j

in reply to [email protected] on 03/09/2005 8:48 AM

03/09/2005 5:50 PM

Acetone or other solvents should remove it

John

On 3 Sep 2005 08:48:24 -0700, [email protected] wrote:

>Greetings all!
>
>I'm in the middle of a project that has taken longer than expected to
>finish (what a surprise, eh?). Back in April I purchase a bunch of S2S
>Spanish Cedar, and stacked it flat without stickers expecting that it
>would not sit like that for more than a few weeks. Obviously it sat
>longer than expected and some of the boards have leaked sap.
>
>How do I clean this up? It's okay if it leaves marks, because the stain
>is most likely hide them. I just need to clean up the "sticky" without
>making the wood look worse.
>
>Does this mean the wood is too green, or could this have been avoided
>if I have stickered the stack?
>
>
>Thanks,
>Tom


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