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cj April 26th 06 11:42 AM

painting PT wood
 
greetings, i just completed a small retaing wall constructed of pressure
treated wood and now my wife decided the greenish color is not what she
wants so can this type of wood be painted? is there a type of paint for
this purpose?
thanks, cj


jd April 26th 06 01:16 PM

painting PT wood
 
depending onthe type of PT it is, you need to wait for it to finish drying.
If its pre-dried, you can paint it right away. If it isn't (and it probably
isn't), you need to wait 6-8 weeks for it to dry. Once the moisture content
is below about 18%, you can paint it. Any decent paint store can recomend
what will be best for your weather conditions. in general, I seem to recall
that we used plain old exterior house paint, but that was a long time ago,
and I know that the chemicals in PT have changed. Any "deck" product (stain
and sealers mostly) should work fine, as they are pretty much engineered for
PT....

--JD




"cj" wrote in message
...
greetings, i just completed a small retaing wall constructed of pressure
treated wood and now my wife decided the greenish color is not what she
wants so can this type of wood be painted? is there a type of paint for
this purpose?
thanks, cj




[email protected] April 26th 06 01:25 PM

painting PT wood
 
DONT PAINT! IT WILL JUST PEEL!

STAIN ONLY!!!! STAIN ONLY!!]

transparent stain once the wood ages a bit, if yoiu do nothing it will
gradually turn grey.

one day you will see guys in moon suits removing pt woood and the soil
around it nationwide... its the next asbestos....

if you stain it you can easily just brush on more stain whenever you
want, mno peeling paint to deal with.

PT wood expands contracts a lot, thats why it cracks a lot. paint is a
poor choice for anything PT


[email protected] April 26th 06 01:28 PM

painting PT wood
 
In addition to - or as an aside to - jd's comments:
I'd save any scraps and use them as test strips.
My personal preferance would be a stain rather than a paint - if one is
available.
I should think a stain would weather more gracefully than a paint film.
TB


Charles Mulks April 26th 06 01:54 PM

painting PT wood
 
"cj" wrote in message
...
greetings, i just completed a small retaing wall constructed of pressure
treated wood and now my wife decided the greenish color is not what she
wants so can this type of wood be painted? is there a type of paint for
this purpose?
thanks, cj




I paint a lot of pressure treated wood. The "secret" is to remove
the layer of crud deposited on the surface by the pressure treatment
process. I use a hand planer (DeWalt 680K, in my case) to take off
about 1/32nd of an inch or so. I set the planer for 1/64th, then
take 2 or 3 passes - it's pretty obvious when I've taken enough off.
A belt sander with 50 grit paper will get the job done, too, but
nowhere near as fast as the planer. (I hope it's a REALLY small
retaining wall - and don't use a planer near those nail heads! :(

Another problem - the green stuff (copper azole) is going to bleed
through just about any paint you use. (at least it will with latex
based paints, not sure about oil-based) It won't be a problem with
dark green or blue paint but will be very obvious with light colors.


Good luck,
Charlie Mulks



Art April 26th 06 02:16 PM

painting PT wood
 
Sure hope you used gravel and pipes for drainage behind it and anchors so it
doesn't fail in a few years. Even with good drainage, paint is a big
mistake since it will peel from moisture. Stain will work though.


"cj" wrote in message
...
greetings, i just completed a small retaing wall constructed of pressure
treated wood and now my wife decided the greenish color is not what she
wants so can this type of wood be painted? is there a type of paint for
this purpose?
thanks, cj





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