c

14/01/2005 10:44 AM

cherry experiment follow up

In case anyone cares...

I took 4 strips of cherry cut from the same board; on each strip left
1/3 unfinished, put wb poly on 1/3, and put oil-based poly on 1/3; then
put one strip in sunshine, one strip under incandescent, one strip
under fluorescent, and one strip in dark. After about 4 weeks looked
at darkening to see if poly inhibited darkening.

All portions darkened on the sunlight strip and on the artificial light
strips; however, the oil-based poly darkened the least (hard to
quantify, probably about 1/3 less darkening roughly) and the oil-based
poly clearly had a more yellow tone than the other sections. The strip
in the sunshine clearly darkened more than those in the artificial
light. The strip in the sunshine was not outside, but inside on a
windowsill. The strip left in the dark showed no appreciable darkening
in any of the sections.

Charles


This topic has 4 replies

c

in reply to [email protected] on 14/01/2005 10:44 AM

14/01/2005 4:27 PM

I wondered about how much UV my windows blocked (assuming UV is what
matters).


toller wrote:
> > in the sunshine clearly darkened more than those in the artificial
> > light. The strip in the sunshine was not outside, but inside on a
> > windowsill. The strip left in the dark showed no appreciable
darkening
> > in any of the sections.
> >
> I hope you were careful to use a window that didn't block UV...

EP

"Edwin Pawlowski"

in reply to [email protected] on 14/01/2005 10:44 AM

14/01/2005 10:44 PM


<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> In case anyone cares...
>
> I took 4 strips of cherry cut from the same board; on each strip left
> 1/3 unfinished, put wb poly on 1/3, and put oil-based poly on 1/3; then
> put one strip in sunshine, one strip under incandescent, one strip
> under fluorescent, and one strip in dark. After about 4 weeks looked
> at darkening to see if poly inhibited darkening.
>
> All portions darkened on the sunlight strip and on the artificial light
> strips; however, the oil-based poly darkened the least (hard to
> quantify, probably about 1/3 less darkening roughly) and the oil-based
> poly clearly had a more yellow tone than the other sections. The strip
> in the sunshine clearly darkened more than those in the artificial
> light. The strip in the sunshine was not outside, but inside on a
> windowsill. The strip left in the dark showed no appreciable darkening
> in any of the sections.
>
> Charles

It would be interesting to see what the difference is long term. I hope you
dated and photographed them and repeat this post next year.

DJ

"Dave Jackson"

in reply to [email protected] on 14/01/2005 10:44 AM

15/01/2005 3:03 AM

If your windows are newer and coated with silver (LoE or LoE2) they block
most of the UV rays. keep us posted!--dave
<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I wondered about how much UV my windows blocked (assuming UV is what
> matters).
>
>
> toller wrote:
>> > in the sunshine clearly darkened more than those in the artificial
>> > light. The strip in the sunshine was not outside, but inside on a
>> > windowsill. The strip left in the dark showed no appreciable
> darkening
>> > in any of the sections.
>> >
>> I hope you were careful to use a window that didn't block UV...
>

tt

"toller"

in reply to [email protected] on 14/01/2005 10:44 AM

14/01/2005 10:58 PM

> in the sunshine clearly darkened more than those in the artificial
> light. The strip in the sunshine was not outside, but inside on a
> windowsill. The strip left in the dark showed no appreciable darkening
> in any of the sections.
>
I hope you were careful to use a window that didn't block UV...


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