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Dan-the-K
 
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Default Help with sticky surfaces


mike wilcox wrote:
Dan-the-K wrote:

Woodhead wrote:

Yuck!

Question:

How long did the stain dry before the Poly?



Over a day. It was dry and nonsticky.


Someone will know what contaminants were picked up from the tack cloth.



Every store in my neck of the woods sells the same tack cloth, for 75
cents. Its cheesecloth. If its made as the books say, it would have
mineral spirits and varnish.


Jim
"Dan-the-K" wrote in message
roups.com...

For practice, I'm finishing a piece of furniture that isn't too
important. It is a fish tank stand.

I did fine with the top surface, fixing it up and using MinWax
pre-stain Wood conditioner, red oak Wood Finish Stain and Fast Drying
Polyurethane. That's part 1.

I'm now working on the bottom. This is part 2. No fixing up because
its the bottom; I went straight to 2 layers of Wood Finish Stain, sand,
and then I applied 1 layer of Polyurethane. The next step was to sand
it a little with 340 grade paper. I did that yesterday. After that
sanding, all the surfaces I had worked on are sticky and I don't know
what to do.

I think the stickiness is due to getting mineral spirits on the wood.
I did that twice. First, I lubricated the sandpaper with mineral
spirits. Second, I spilled some paint thinner on my tack cloth. When
I used the tack cloth, it left a wet surface behind.

Is tacky the same as sticky?

Any ideas on what to do? My game plan is to wait. Its still sticky, a
day later.

TIA,

Dan



I think a light application of dry steel wool might solve the problem.
I used some dry 320 grit paper earlier on one spot and think that
helped a little bit.

Dan


With stain it's important not to leave any sitting on the surface, the
big mistake people make is not wiping it all off or not letting it dry
24 hours. I never use a tack cloth, just vacuum up the dust or wipe
lightly with a rag and paint thinner.

Poly can be a problem if the stuff is old or applied too thick, it
should thinned 8 to 1 and allowed at least 24 hours before sanding, 0000
steel wool works better than sand paper between coats.



I'm sure I wiped it all off after about 15 minutes and I'm sure I
waited a day, maybe as much as 3 days before I sanded it and applied
the poly. As I said, the wood was in good condition after applying
poly and before I sanded it and cleared it off with a tack cloth.

There are two sections that might have caused a problem, but the
stickiness is everywhere, not just on those two sections. On those two
sections, I applied a second coat of stain but forgot to wipe the
excess off in 15 minutes or less. That stain remained for about a half
hour or hour. More than a day later, I applied another coat of stain
to all horizontal surfaces.

Dan