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  2. Top coats over tung oil finish - FineWoodworking

    www.finewoodworking.com/forum/top-coats-over-tung-oil-finish

    The first coat was BLO w/pumice (to seal/fill the pores). Next came 6 coats of high gloss tung oil. As a mechanical protectant (of sorts), the final coat was buffed paste wax. The end result was a VERY high sheen (mostly from the tung oil; the wax just "smoothed" the sheen out a bit).

  3. Tung oil project - FineWoodworking

    www.finewoodworking.com/forum/tung-oil-project

    Tung oil project. Hi all, I have two projects with Tung oil. One is a beech wood kitchen worktop, where I’ve did some testing and can apply the pure tung oil with it easily absorbing and be finished in 3-4 layers. My question is on the second project, which is a chestnut parquet floor. The tung oil does not readily absorb into the wood, so I ...

  4. thinning tung oil - FineWoodworking

    www.finewoodworking.com/forum/thinning-tung-oil

    When tung oil cures the molecules undergo a kind of shrinkage that leave a roughened surface--satin is about what you get. If there is enough of those molecules left on the surface to abrade to a smoother, shinier surface, you have left a very soft surface, certainly compared to French polish which is one of the hardest finish surface.

  5. Tung Oil in cold weather - FineWoodworking

    www.finewoodworking.com/forum/tung-oil-in-cold-weather

    Tung oil is very slow polymerizing at "room temperature." Even slower as the temeperature goes down. 40-50 degrees is just too cold to do finishing. Either get some kind of closed heater (an electric oil model, etc) to get the area up to at least 65-68 or bring the project into a warmer area of the house. You might try a tent over the project ...

  6. Can you add color to Tung Oil? - FineWoodworking

    www.finewoodworking.com/forum/can-you-add-color-to-tung-oil

    Instead of the TransTint dyes, you can use oil-base dyes (available at woodfinishsupply.com), oil-base stains (Minwax and Benjamin Moore are good choices since they contain a high percenrage of dye vs. pigments), or you can add oil-base pigments like Japan colors in oil (same source as the oil-base dyes).

  7. Shellac over Tung Oil - FineWoodworking

    www.finewoodworking.com/forum/shellac-over-tung-oil

    For example, Minwax Tung Oil Finish is an oil/varnish mix, while Formby's is a varnish. Either type will be OK under shellac and probably will cure more reliably overnight than pure tung oil. With pure tung oil overnight is cutting it a bit close, especially if your finishing space isn't heated to around 70° F. Rich14 | Feb 12, 2007 04:41pm | #5.

  8. Pure vs Polymerized Tung Oil - FineWoodworking

    www.finewoodworking.com/forum/pure-vs-polymerized-tung-oil

    Let me suggest you may be overthinking this. As I suggested earlier, for an in-the-wood finish that will be the least amber, pure tung oil, a light alkyd/soya oil varnish like Pratt&Lambert 38 and mineral spirits is the best you can do. Test it out with the 1/3, 1/3, 1/3 proportions and see how it looks on your test piece.

  9. Japan drier and tung oil - FineWoodworking

    www.finewoodworking.com/forum/japan-drier-and-tung-oil

    geoffndawn | Posted in General Discussion on December 10, 2002 10:21am. Does anyone have a good formula for how much japan drier to use with tung oil to speed up the drying time? The can references so many ounces of drier with a gallon of paint or varnish, but for small projects is there a formula for how many drops per ounce of oil? Any ideas ...

  10. Dull, lifeless surface with Tung oil - FineWoodworking

    www.finewoodworking.com/forum/dull-lifeless-surface-with-tung-oil

    After using a “tung oil finish” varnish/oil with quite a bit of success. I thought I would use pure tung oil to finish a project to see how it compared. I would like some feedback. When I put on the first and second…or even the 3rd coat of 20 to 50% diluted (in mineral spirits) oil, and wipe it down after 15 minutes to 1/2 hr.

  11. Tung Oil Shelf Life - FineWoodworking

    www.finewoodworking.com/forum/tung-oil-shelf-life

    When mixing pure tung oil for a final finish -- I usually use a mix of 1 part raw linseed, 3 parts tung, 11.5 parts turps, 0.5 parts Japan drier -- I mix basically what I'll need for a project, although I've had the mixture hold up well in glass containers for six months or so before it's used up on smaller projects.LWJ.