NightShadow1991
Member
Hi all, newbie here after some advice.
I'm a welder by trade and work with wood, so I know wood is a nightmare to work with. However, I just wanted some advice on some timber.
I am making some outdoor seating for a client, it's redwood, planed and routered. I know any softwood outside isn't ideal, I usually use sapele or iroko externally, but the client didn't have a decent budget. I have made many of these flat pack metal picnic benches and just used over the counter C24 from travis perkins, cut to size, dried out, lightly sanded and apply a half decent decking or UV oil to it. It works fine, I've got one that's 4-5 years old and apart from some shrinkage and some splitting, it's done well.
However, TP usually send it soaking wet and twisted and warped and lately I've had shocking quality. Plus they're a bit overkill in 6x2 and 9x2. So I got a chap up North who I use for lots of sapele and oak slats to do me a load of kiln dried redwood all the same size, slightly dearer than TP stuff, but without the tanalith horrible green stain. However, it does seem quite fresh and maybe not as kiln dried as I thought. I will get the reader in it tomorrow and see what the moisture content is. They are 160mm x 32mm x 1800mm lengths and are very light, weigh about 3.5kg to 5kg each, but there are lots of knots and most the them - although not leaching - do seem damp, fresh, wet.
So! To my point. I see it as I have 3 options.
1- apply knotting solution before staining. I'm not painting, but staining with two coats of Liberon UV decking Oil, it's worked well before and it's good stuff for quick coating and coverage. Osmo UV is great, but too dear for the qty I'm doing.
However, from what I;ve learned, knotting is only really for preventing staining when painting as a top coat, they don't actually stop the resin/sap from pouring out over time. So guess this will be a waste of time. I;ve been told they are all rubbish anyway, knotting solutions, especially for external use, despite what people say. My brother recently had major issues with the heat causing pre knotted timber leaching through the paint. So I put it doen to the heat.
2- get my plumbers blow torch and add some meths to the worst - visible face - knots and burn it off. Never actually done this before, does it need a lot of sanding thereafter, or is it as simple as light it up and brush it off before staining?
3- just apply the two coats of stain and wait until the client complains about sticky/sappy wooden benches?
I'm more for the burning affair, as this seems to be what releases sap, heat and sun, so surely burning the majority out now, will help prevent too much down the line. Otherwise, worst case scenario, if down the line - a few months, a year, whatever - the sap pours out and causes problems, can you apply knotting to it even if it's stained, if you lightly prep the surface?
Ultimately, my terms and conditions cover me from such things, but just wanted to make sure my client has as little fuss and grief as possible. I'm thinking sticking with the C24 from TP might have been better/cheaper, but wanted to give the machined redwood a go as it hasn't been stained and will take the oil much better and look dead smart. Just concerned the wood will pour with sap more so than the C24 stuff, maybe it's a different kiln drying process
Anyway, apologies from the long thread, any help greatly appreciated.
Best, Jim
I'm a welder by trade and work with wood, so I know wood is a nightmare to work with. However, I just wanted some advice on some timber.
I am making some outdoor seating for a client, it's redwood, planed and routered. I know any softwood outside isn't ideal, I usually use sapele or iroko externally, but the client didn't have a decent budget. I have made many of these flat pack metal picnic benches and just used over the counter C24 from travis perkins, cut to size, dried out, lightly sanded and apply a half decent decking or UV oil to it. It works fine, I've got one that's 4-5 years old and apart from some shrinkage and some splitting, it's done well.
However, TP usually send it soaking wet and twisted and warped and lately I've had shocking quality. Plus they're a bit overkill in 6x2 and 9x2. So I got a chap up North who I use for lots of sapele and oak slats to do me a load of kiln dried redwood all the same size, slightly dearer than TP stuff, but without the tanalith horrible green stain. However, it does seem quite fresh and maybe not as kiln dried as I thought. I will get the reader in it tomorrow and see what the moisture content is. They are 160mm x 32mm x 1800mm lengths and are very light, weigh about 3.5kg to 5kg each, but there are lots of knots and most the them - although not leaching - do seem damp, fresh, wet.
So! To my point. I see it as I have 3 options.
1- apply knotting solution before staining. I'm not painting, but staining with two coats of Liberon UV decking Oil, it's worked well before and it's good stuff for quick coating and coverage. Osmo UV is great, but too dear for the qty I'm doing.
However, from what I;ve learned, knotting is only really for preventing staining when painting as a top coat, they don't actually stop the resin/sap from pouring out over time. So guess this will be a waste of time. I;ve been told they are all rubbish anyway, knotting solutions, especially for external use, despite what people say. My brother recently had major issues with the heat causing pre knotted timber leaching through the paint. So I put it doen to the heat.
2- get my plumbers blow torch and add some meths to the worst - visible face - knots and burn it off. Never actually done this before, does it need a lot of sanding thereafter, or is it as simple as light it up and brush it off before staining?
3- just apply the two coats of stain and wait until the client complains about sticky/sappy wooden benches?
I'm more for the burning affair, as this seems to be what releases sap, heat and sun, so surely burning the majority out now, will help prevent too much down the line. Otherwise, worst case scenario, if down the line - a few months, a year, whatever - the sap pours out and causes problems, can you apply knotting to it even if it's stained, if you lightly prep the surface?
Ultimately, my terms and conditions cover me from such things, but just wanted to make sure my client has as little fuss and grief as possible. I'm thinking sticking with the C24 from TP might have been better/cheaper, but wanted to give the machined redwood a go as it hasn't been stained and will take the oil much better and look dead smart. Just concerned the wood will pour with sap more so than the C24 stuff, maybe it's a different kiln drying process
Anyway, apologies from the long thread, any help greatly appreciated.
Best, Jim