timber
Established Member
Rustins or Liberion which do you chaps recommend for good penetration in oak. Thin maybee with white spirit ???
Thanks
Thanks
What are you finishing? Thinned varnish will give you much the same effect, often faster, while additionally offering superior protection (more resistant to scratches and water).timber":37j9n63w said:Rustins or Liberion which do you chaps recommend for good penetration in oak.
Any oil-based finish can be diluted as much as desired (primarily to ease application, not for penetration reasons), but Danish oils are already a diluted finish so there's often nothing to be gained by thinning them further.timber":37j9n63w said:Thin maybee with white spirit ???
Difficulty in removing the excess from the grain?phil.p":23sk1ro2 said:I actually had an online conversation with a lady from Liberon who told me they don't recommend Danish Oil on oak, but I didn't get a reply when I tried to find out why.
phil.p":1u6cokd3 said:I actually had an online conversation with a lady from Liberon who told me they don't recommend Danish Oil on oak, but I didn't get a reply when I tried to find out why. I've never had a problem with it (not specifically theirs).
phil.p":16vsefr8 said:Yeah ... possibly. I emailed back but didn't get an answer. The number of times it's cropped up since make me think I should have persisted.
Custard - the only answer I got was that it's different resins that make the difference between Danish Oil and Finishing Oil. Terry Smart was helpful, but Chestnut don't make Danish so he couldn't give a definitive answer. I tried Mylands but their email address didn't work. I didn't try Rustins.
Yes, worth reading, that one. I think Sgian Dubh may be right. (He usually is )marcros":2na05vkc said:i think that it is related to the BLO in the mixture. I have no knowledge, but recall this thread boiled-linseed-oil-and-oak-t33865.html
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