View Single Post
  #10   Report Post  
Posted to rec.crafts.woodturning
Gerald Ross[_3_] Gerald Ross[_3_] is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 274
Default End grain sealer

Kevin Miller wrote:
On 06/01/2011 12:28 PM, Nova wrote:
On Wed, 01 Jun 2011 11:57:39 -0800, Kevin
wrote:

On 06/01/2011 03:54 AM, Jack Stein wrote:
On 5/19/2011 9:27 PM, Kevin Miller wrote:
I got a gallon of end grain sealer some time back, and it seems to have
caked in the bottle. It's in a one gallon plastic jug, sort of like a
milk jug. I've never had it set up on me in a closed container before.
Does anyone know if there's a way to redissolve it? It's between half
and three quarters of the bottle, so I hate to waste it.

It's not solid - there is still some liquid in it but there are large
hunks of solidified wax too.

The lid has been screwed on the bottle - it's not like it was in a can
exposed to air.

If it were me, I'd try some lacquer thinner, which will dissolve wax
with no problem. Also, if you have an old iron, see if that melts the
stuff, which sounds like wax. I've used regular paraffin wax with an old
iron to melt the wax right into the end grain, and that works great.

End grain sealer is a water based solution, so I don't think the lacquer
thinner would work too well. I'm going to give the paint stirrer method
a go as soon as I can find an empty paint can. the sealer is in a
plastic jug w/about a one inch opening at the top, so to get the wax&
such out I'll probably have to destroy the container.

Thanks though..


If the product is Anchorseal by U. C. Coatings give them a call.
They're located and Buffalo, NY. I picked up a 5 gallon pail at their
plant a few years ago and they gave me the grand tour of their
facilities. Great people.


http://www.uccoatings.com/
Customer Service Representative, please call 1-888-END-COAT (363-2628)
between the hours of 8:00am - 4:30pm EST.


That's a thought. I don't know if it's Anchorseal or not. It isn't
branded as such (Woodcrafter's or something like that). I've always
thought that no matter the brand it was probably Anchorseal. Sort of
like green beans in the supermarket - all the brands probably came from
the same cannery, just w/different labels...

...Kevin


They may make them all, but all are not the same. I bought a jug from
Woodcraft and it was definitely different from that sold by Packard.
More runny and drippy.

--
Gerald Ross
Cochran, GA

If you don't make the rules, you don't
have to keep them. If you do make the
rules, you won't