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Dave September 2nd 10 02:24 PM

Milk straining wood
 
Why would a newly varnished table be stained white when milk has been
spilled on it. It is newly varnish using Ronseal water based varnish
that is a milky colour in the tin.

Dave

The Natural Philosopher[_2_] September 2nd 10 02:55 PM

Milk straining wood
 
Dave wrote:
Why would a newly varnished table be stained white when milk has been
spilled on it. It is newly varnish using Ronseal water based varnish
that is a milky colour in the tin.

Dave

because its water based.?

Stuart Noble September 2nd 10 03:21 PM

Milk straining wood
 
On 02/09/2010 14:24, Dave wrote:
Why would a newly varnished table be stained white when milk has been
spilled on it. It is newly varnish using Ronseal water based varnish
that is a milky colour in the tin.

Dave


Sounds like the varnish hasn't formed a proper film. This can happen if
the wood is too porous, or subsequent coats were applied before the
first had fully dried

Peter Scott September 2nd 10 04:06 PM

Milk straining wood
 
On 02/09/2010 15:21, stuart noble wrote:
On 02/09/2010 14:24, Dave wrote:
Why would a newly varnished table be stained white when milk has been
spilled on it. It is newly varnish using Ronseal water based varnish
that is a milky colour in the tin.

Dave


Sounds like the varnish hasn't formed a proper film. This can happen if
the wood is too porous, or subsequent coats were applied before the
first had fully dried


How newly varnished? These water based varnishes take quite a while to
become fully water proof, if ever. Eurotrash! I won't use them. Just
chucked a tin away. Best to stick to yacht varnish or similar. Once
fully dry, you can sand it off and try again. The test is does the tin
say 'use white spirit to clean brushes'. If so it's probably OK.

Peter Scott

Spamlet September 2nd 10 06:59 PM

Milk straining wood
 

"Dave" wrote in message
...
Why would a newly varnished table be stained white when milk has been
spilled on it. It is newly varnish using Ronseal water based varnish that
is a milky colour in the tin.

Dave


As we've covered a number of times, varnish isn't an ideal choice for a
table top in any case, as it tends to get scratched up quickly, and
scratches won't simply polish out as they do with traditional treatments.
However, even good wax finishes will change colour a bit where water lies on
them, so the moral with either surface is to wipe wet off straight away, and
wax/french polish often.

S



Dave September 2nd 10 07:17 PM

Milk straining wood
 
On 02/09/2010 16:06, Peter Scott wrote:
On 02/09/2010 15:21, stuart noble wrote:
On 02/09/2010 14:24, Dave wrote:
Why would a newly varnished table be stained white when milk has been
spilled on it. It is newly varnish using Ronseal water based varnish
that is a milky colour in the tin.

Dave


Sounds like the varnish hasn't formed a proper film. This can happen if
the wood is too porous, or subsequent coats were applied before the
first had fully dried


How newly varnished? These water based varnishes take quite a while to
become fully water proof, if ever. Eurotrash! I won't use them. Just
chucked a tin away. Best to stick to yacht varnish or similar. Once
fully dry, you can sand it off and try again. The test is does the tin
say 'use white spirit to clean brushes'. If so it's probably OK.

Peter Scott


Thanks all for the replies, I'll pass your comments on.

Dave

ransley September 2nd 10 10:58 PM

Milk straining wood
 
On Sep 2, 8:24*am, Dave wrote:
Why would a newly varnished table be stained white when milk has been
spilled on it. It is newly varnish using Ronseal water based varnish
that is a milky colour in the tin.

Dave


Give it a week or so to dry it may go away, doesnt using a water base
product just seem a bit wrong to you on a table that will get wet. Oil
polyurethane is the product to use

Dave September 3rd 10 06:14 PM

Milk straining wood
 
On 02/09/2010 22:58, ransley wrote:
On Sep 2, 8:24 am, wrote:
Why would a newly varnished table be stained white when milk has been
spilled on it. It is newly varnish using Ronseal water based varnish
that is a milky colour in the tin.

Dave


Give it a week or so to dry it may go away, doesnt using a water base
product just seem a bit wrong to you on a table that will get wet. Oil
polyurethane is the product to use


That's what I thought, but I am not the pub manager that knows
everything out side his basic training.

Dave


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