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Karl Townsend August 15th 10 08:11 PM

Preserve wood trailer deck
 
The wood deck on my heavy duty 5th wheel trailer hasn't had anything
done to it.

"The Kid" tells me to put a good heavy coat of used motor oil on the
two inch planks and let it weather. Good idea? better suggestions? The
trailer cost $7K and I'd like the deck to last.

Karl


Ignoramus7071 August 15th 10 08:17 PM

Preserve wood trailer deck
 
On 2010-08-15, Karl Townsend wrote:
The wood deck on my heavy duty 5th wheel trailer hasn't had anything
done to it.

"The Kid" tells me to put a good heavy coat of used motor oil on the
two inch planks and let it weather. Good idea? better suggestions? The
trailer cost $7K and I'd like the deck to last.


For a nicer application, you can buy a pail of mistinted deck oil from
Home Depot. Redo it every 2 years.

i

Pete C. August 16th 10 12:14 AM

Preserve wood trailer deck
 

Karl Townsend wrote:

The wood deck on my heavy duty 5th wheel trailer hasn't had anything
done to it.

"The Kid" tells me to put a good heavy coat of used motor oil on the
two inch planks and let it weather. Good idea? better suggestions? The
trailer cost $7K and I'd like the deck to last.

Karl


Is it PT wood? Deck preservatives would likely be better than making an
oily mess. Recall creosoted wood factory floors / tinderboxes?

[email protected] August 16th 10 04:10 AM

Preserve wood trailer deck
 
On Aug 15, 1:11*pm, Karl Townsend
wrote:
The wood deck on my heavy duty 5th wheel trailer hasn't had anything
done to it.

"The Kid" tells me to put a good heavy coat of used motor oil on the
two inch planks and let it weather. Good idea? better suggestions? The
trailer cost $7K and I'd like the deck to last.

Karl


Ferget that! You'll have a slippery mess forever, lubricating oils
never dry. Scrape it down, use some deck oil on it. Hit both sides,
road spray is worse than rain. Visit HD, Lowe's, wally world,
whatever you have. Can be had in 5 gallon buckets for really big
jobs, the tinted stuff will last longer under the sun. Unfinished
wood really soaks it up, plan on a couple of coats at least. Reminds
me to redo mine before the snow flies, needs to be redone every few
years. Nothing is forever if it sits out in the weather. My trailer
is fairly small, I use a 6" brush. Usually takes an afternoon to do
the bed, both sides, and the sides. For larger stuff, I'd probably
use a roller or sprayer. Takes about 2 quarts to do the equivalent of
an 8'x8' area, both sides.

Stan

Ivan Vegvary[_2_] August 16th 10 05:14 AM

Preserve wood trailer deck
 

"Karl Townsend" wrote in message
...
The wood deck on my heavy duty 5th wheel trailer hasn't had anything
done to it.

"The Kid" tells me to put a good heavy coat of used motor oil on the
two inch planks and let it weather. Good idea? better suggestions? The
trailer cost $7K and I'd like the deck to last.

Karl

Karl, back when you and I were both kids (50 years ago), automatic
transmission fluid (used) was the way to keep board fences from drying out.
Most popular was Chevron which was red in color. I pumped gas from age 16
to 21 and we would give it away to anyone that asked.

Ivan Vegvary


whit3rd August 16th 10 07:51 AM

Preserve wood trailer deck
 
On Aug 15, 12:11*pm, Karl Townsend
wrote:
The wood deck on my heavy duty 5th wheel trailer hasn't had anything
done to it.

"The Kid" tells me to put a good heavy coat of used motor oil on the
two inch planks and let it weather. Good idea?


Get some stain. It lasts better than 'water treatment', and will cure
so you don't leave an oily runoff when the rains arrive. It's easy
to redo
when the time comes (paint isn't so forgiving).

It'll cure water-resistant, so it'd be nice if you could store
the trailer non-level (to let water run off).

Steve W.[_4_] August 16th 10 05:15 PM

Preserve wood trailer deck
 
wrote:
On Aug 15, 1:11 pm, Karl Townsend
wrote:
The wood deck on my heavy duty 5th wheel trailer hasn't had anything
done to it.

"The Kid" tells me to put a good heavy coat of used motor oil on the
two inch planks and let it weather. Good idea? better suggestions? The
trailer cost $7K and I'd like the deck to last.

Karl


Ferget that! You'll have a slippery mess forever, lubricating oils
never dry. Scrape it down, use some deck oil on it. Hit both sides,
road spray is worse than rain. Visit HD, Lowe's, wally world,
whatever you have. Can be had in 5 gallon buckets for really big
jobs, the tinted stuff will last longer under the sun. Unfinished
wood really soaks it up, plan on a couple of coats at least. Reminds
me to redo mine before the snow flies, needs to be redone every few
years. Nothing is forever if it sits out in the weather. My trailer
is fairly small, I use a 6" brush. Usually takes an afternoon to do
the bed, both sides, and the sides. For larger stuff, I'd probably
use a roller or sprayer. Takes about 2 quarts to do the equivalent of
an 8'x8' area, both sides.

Stan


I cheated when I did the deck on mine. I pulled the the old wood off,
drilled the holes in the new wood and then pulled it off, then laid a
cheap plastic tarp down on the frame making a shallow tank. New wood got
dropped in the tank and I poured a couple 5 gallon pails of deck oil in.
Went out and turned them every now and then while they soaked for a
couple days. Tossed another tarp over it to keep bugs/rain out. Drained
the tank back into the two 5 gallon pails. Lost about 2.5 gallons into
the wood. Bolted it all down and it has held up real well for the past 4
years.

--
Steve W.

Mark Rand August 18th 10 11:03 PM

Preserve wood trailer deck
 
On Sun, 15 Aug 2010 14:11:51 -0500, Karl Townsend
wrote:

The wood deck on my heavy duty 5th wheel trailer hasn't had anything
done to it.

"The Kid" tells me to put a good heavy coat of used motor oil on the
two inch planks and let it weather. Good idea? better suggestions? The
trailer cost $7K and I'd like the deck to last.

Karl



Travel to somewhere a long way away from Kalifornia and get something with
Copper-chromium-arsenate or organo-boron salts in it :-)


Mark Rand
RTFM


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