Woodworking (rec.woodworking) Discussion forum covering all aspects of working with wood. All levels of expertise are encouraged to particiapte.

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
Bay Area Dave
 
Posts: n/a
Default Boeshield T-9 wins"Wood" Magazine's rust preventative test

Nice to see a product I bought against my better judgment (It's WAAAY
pricey) has been given great reviews by Wood for preventing rust,
compared to slipit, fastwax, topcote, and 2 waxes.

Keeter: Naval Jelly was frowned on for use on stationary tools.

dave

  #2   Report Post  
John Crea
 
Posts: n/a
Default Boeshield T-9 wins"Wood" Magazine's rust preventative test

Not surprised, BoeShield has a fanatical following in the boating
world where salt spray/etc is the norm

I've used it for many years and swear by it as a rust preventative,
but frankly would NOT use it on my woodworking surfaces, it leaves a
very SOFT wax film behind that would rub off fairly rapidly

John

On Wed, 14 Jan 2004 03:59:22 GMT, Bay Area Dave wrote:

Nice to see a product I bought against my better judgment (It's WAAAY
pricey) has been given great reviews by Wood for preventing rust,
compared to slipit, fastwax, topcote, and 2 waxes.

Keeter: Naval Jelly was frowned on for use on stationary tools.

dave


  #3   Report Post  
Bay Area Dave
 
Posts: n/a
Default Boeshield T-9 wins"Wood" Magazine's rust preventative test

John, I use it on surfaces not subject to wood being placed on them,
like the cast iron stand for my Delta DP. Being in CA, I rely primarily
on SC Johnson's Paste Wax for TS and jointer. Humidity in my shop today
is about 65%. The magazine bears out my observation that the stuff
doesn't dry in just an hour, either.

dave

John Crea wrote:

Not surprised, BoeShield has a fanatical following in the boating
world where salt spray/etc is the norm

I've used it for many years and swear by it as a rust preventative,
but frankly would NOT use it on my woodworking surfaces, it leaves a
very SOFT wax film behind that would rub off fairly rapidly

John

On Wed, 14 Jan 2004 03:59:22 GMT, Bay Area Dave wrote:


Nice to see a product I bought against my better judgment (It's WAAAY
pricey) has been given great reviews by Wood for preventing rust,
compared to slipit, fastwax, topcote, and 2 waxes.

Keeter: Naval Jelly was frowned on for use on stationary tools.

dave




  #4   Report Post  
John Crea
 
Posts: n/a
Default Boeshield T-9 wins"Wood" Magazine's rust preventative test

Dave

Non wear surfaces are ideal for BoeShield T-9

And I agree totaly, if you spray and WIPE it off, it dries in about
1hr or so, but if you spray it on and just let it dry, it can take
DAYS to dry totally.

Also, it does better at rust prevention on horizontal pieces versus
vertical ones, as it runs down on vertical stuff and leaves a thinner
"coat" than it does when applied to horizontal stuff and you get a
thicker layer/coat

I totally agree, for wear surfaces like table tops, jointer beds, etc,
it is hard to beat a good pastewax coating, and a whole lot easier to
re-apply pastewax as needed compared to re-spraying the BoeShield T-9

Anyone have any first hand experience on the BoeShield Blade and Bit
cleaner???

John

On Wed, 14 Jan 2004 05:40:37 GMT, Bay Area Dave wrote:

John, I use it on surfaces not subject to wood being placed on them,
like the cast iron stand for my Delta DP. Being in CA, I rely primarily
on SC Johnson's Paste Wax for TS and jointer. Humidity in my shop today
is about 65%. The magazine bears out my observation that the stuff
doesn't dry in just an hour, either.

dave

John Crea wrote:

Not surprised, BoeShield has a fanatical following in the boating
world where salt spray/etc is the norm

I've used it for many years and swear by it as a rust preventative,
but frankly would NOT use it on my woodworking surfaces, it leaves a
very SOFT wax film behind that would rub off fairly rapidly

John

On Wed, 14 Jan 2004 03:59:22 GMT, Bay Area Dave wrote:


Nice to see a product I bought against my better judgment (It's WAAAY
pricey) has been given great reviews by Wood for preventing rust,
compared to slipit, fastwax, topcote, and 2 waxes.

Keeter: Naval Jelly was frowned on for use on stationary tools.

dave




  #5   Report Post  
Tom Watson
 
Posts: n/a
Default Boeshield T-9 wins"Wood" Magazine's rust preventative test

On Wed, 14 Jan 2004 07:11:32 -0600, John Crea
wrote:


I totally agree, for wear surfaces like table tops, jointer beds, etc,
it is hard to beat a good pastewax coating, and a whole lot easier to
re-apply pastewax as needed compared to re-spraying the BoeShield T-9


After trying all of the products on the market, I decided to try
wiping the cast iron down with dewaxed shellac. So far it is working
perfectly. It goes on quickly, gives a smooth surface, has higher
resistance to water vapor than wax, wears well, is cheap, and is easy
to reapply when needed. My shop is next to a creek and is only
intermittently heated (by a
fire-breathing-moisture-producing-kero-fired-salamander heater) and I
have had zero rust since switching to the shellac coating.




Thomas J. Watson-Cabinetmaker (ret)
Real Email is: tjwatson1ATcomcastDOTnet
Website: http://home.comcast.net/~tjwatson1


  #6   Report Post  
goonair
 
Posts: n/a
Default Boeshield T-9 wins"Wood" Magazine's rust preventative test

he said "Better Judgment" LOLOLOLOLOLOLOL

"Bay Area Dave" wrote in message
.. .
Nice to see a product I bought against my better judgment (It's WAAAY
pricey) has been given great reviews by Wood for preventing rust,
compared to slipit, fastwax, topcote, and 2 waxes.

Keeter: Naval Jelly was frowned on for use on stationary tools.

dave



Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Topcote v. Boeshield v. Paste Wax v. Shellac - Da Winnah! Tom Watson Woodworking 35 December 3rd 03 10:26 PM
test for Jimbo dale Metalworking 3 November 13th 03 05:52 PM
Possible Condensation Solution? - Test Data Tom Watson Woodworking 4 November 7th 03 08:51 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 01:39 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 DIYbanter.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about DIY & home improvement"