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N. Thornton September 4th 04 08:16 PM

Wood ----ed
 
Hi


outdoor wood, splitting warping and beginning to get fungus. Its still
strong enough though, but clearly this is the last chance to save it.
I've glooped it well with wood preserver, but it still has numerous
split/cracks for water to get in. Anything I could do to prolong its
life?

NT

Ian Stirling September 4th 04 09:07 PM

N. Thornton wrote:
Hi


outdoor wood, splitting warping and beginning to get fungus. Its still
strong enough though, but clearly this is the last chance to save it.
I've glooped it well with wood preserver, but it still has numerous
split/cracks for water to get in. Anything I could do to prolong its
life?


Erect a shed round it?

Mindwipe September 4th 04 10:08 PM


"Ian Stirling" wrote in message
...
N. Thornton wrote:
Hi


outdoor wood, splitting warping and beginning to get fungus. Its still
strong enough though, but clearly this is the last chance to save it.
I've glooped it well with wood preserver, but it still has numerous
split/cracks for water to get in. Anything I could do to prolong its
life?


Erect a shed round it?

you could tar it but it will look yuck
you could aplly clear silicone along the cracks and then varnish over the
top



N. Thornton September 5th 04 10:35 AM

"Mindwipe" wrote in message ...
"Ian Stirling" wrote in message
...
N. Thornton wrote:


outdoor wood, splitting warping and beginning to get fungus. Its still
strong enough though, but clearly this is the last chance to save it.
I've glooped it well with wood preserver, but it still has numerous
split/cracks for water to get in. Anything I could do to prolong its
life?


Erect a shed round it?


you could tar it but it will look yuck
you could aplly clear silicone along the cracks and then varnish over the
top


I wonder. It basically has 2 problems.

First the wood is covered in cracks, and I did wonder about filling
them by wiping the whole thing with filler, but silicone might be
better.

Second all the main lengths of wood are made from 2 flat pieces nailed
together, might as well have a sign on it saying 'water enter here'.
I spose I could sililcone it all? Yeah, i would need a lot of gunk but
I guess its worthwhile. Thank you.

Regards, NT

Pete C September 5th 04 10:49 PM

On 5 Sep 2004 02:35:23 -0700, (N. Thornton) wrote:

"Mindwipe" wrote in message ...
"Ian Stirling" wrote in message
...
N. Thornton wrote:


outdoor wood, splitting warping and beginning to get fungus. Its still
strong enough though, but clearly this is the last chance to save it.
I've glooped it well with wood preserver, but it still has numerous
split/cracks for water to get in. Anything I could do to prolong its
life?


Erect a shed round it?


you could tar it but it will look yuck
you could aplly clear silicone along the cracks and then varnish over the
top


I wonder. It basically has 2 problems.

First the wood is covered in cracks, and I did wonder about filling
them by wiping the whole thing with filler, but silicone might be
better.

Second all the main lengths of wood are made from 2 flat pieces nailed
together, might as well have a sign on it saying 'water enter here'.
I spose I could sililcone it all? Yeah, i would need a lot of gunk but
I guess its worthwhile. Thank you.


Hi,

What sort of wood is it and where is it? How is it joined?

A wood preserver won't necessarily stop algae growing on it, or the
oils being leeched out. For that danish oil or one of the shed and
fence preservers which are wax based with a biocide will do.

cheers,
Pete.

N. Thornton September 6th 04 09:06 AM

Pete C wrote in message . ..
On 5 Sep 2004 02:35:23 -0700, (N. Thornton) wrote:

"Mindwipe" wrote in message ...
"Ian Stirling" wrote in message
...
N. Thornton wrote:


outdoor wood, splitting warping and beginning to get fungus. Its still
strong enough though, but clearly this is the last chance to save it.
I've glooped it well with wood preserver, but it still has numerous
split/cracks for water to get in. Anything I could do to prolong its
life?


Erect a shed round it?


you could tar it but it will look yuck
you could aplly clear silicone along the cracks and then varnish over the
top


I wonder. It basically has 2 problems.

First the wood is covered in cracks, and I did wonder about filling
them by wiping the whole thing with filler, but silicone might be
better.

Second all the main lengths of wood are made from 2 flat pieces nailed
together, might as well have a sign on it saying 'water enter here'.
I spose I could sililcone it all? Yeah, i would need a lot of gunk but
I guess its worthwhile. Thank you.


Hi,

What sort of wood is it and where is it? How is it joined?


I presume either spruce or pine, dont actually know. Its a handmade
construction in the garden. Joined... not very well, just butted up
and nailed.

A wood preserver won't necessarily stop algae growing on it, or the
oils being leeched out. For that danish oil or one of the shed and
fence preservers which are wax based with a biocide will do.


I've used shed stuff on it, its the numerous cracks Im concenred
about, the water will just bypass the treated surface.

NT

The Natural Philosopher September 6th 04 09:26 AM

N. Thornton wrote:

"Mindwipe" wrote in message ...

"Ian Stirling" wrote in message
...

N. Thornton wrote:



outdoor wood, splitting warping and beginning to get fungus. Its still
strong enough though, but clearly this is the last chance to save it.
I've glooped it well with wood preserver, but it still has numerous
split/cracks for water to get in. Anything I could do to prolong its
life?



Erect a shed round it?



you could tar it but it will look yuck
you could aplly clear silicone along the cracks and then varnish over the
top



I wonder. It basically has 2 problems.

First the wood is covered in cracks, and I did wonder about filling
them by wiping the whole thing with filler, but silicone might be
better.

Second all the main lengths of wood are made from 2 flat pieces nailed
together, might as well have a sign on it saying 'water enter here'.
I spose I could sililcone it all? Yeah, i would need a lot of gunk but
I guess its worthwhile. Thank you.

Regards, NT

Coat teh lot in polyester resin. Optionally with glass cloth.



Pete C September 6th 04 08:08 PM

On 6 Sep 2004 01:06:30 -0700, (N. Thornton) wrote:


I presume either spruce or pine, dont actually know. Its a handmade
construction in the garden. Joined... not very well, just butted up
and nailed.

I've used shed stuff on it, its the numerous cracks Im concenred
about, the water will just bypass the treated surface.


Hi,

If the cracks are along the grain I wouldn't worry too much, rot tends
to attack end grain so the surface would go first. OTOH if it's
cracking across the grain (checking) that could be the onset of rot.
Soaking preserver into the cracks should help in any case.

cheers,
Pete.

N. Thornton September 7th 04 01:59 PM

Pete C wrote in message . ..
On 6 Sep 2004 01:06:30 -0700, (N. Thornton) wrote:


If the cracks are along the grain I wouldn't worry too much, rot tends
to attack end grain so the surface would go first. OTOH if it's
cracking across the grain (checking) that could be the onset of rot.
Soaking preserver into the cracks should help in any case.

cheers,
Pete.



Its along the grain cracking, not across like dry rot cracks. I've
preserved it all, but I doubt thats going to get into the cracks any
more than very patchily.

Its a nice piece of woodwork, but unfortunately poorly executed IMHO.
The use of 2 strips nailed together in place of solid 2x4 etc is just
a recipe for rot.


Thanks, NT


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