The Forestry Forum
General Forestry => Drying and Processing => Topic started by: driggins on January 24, 2006, 11:49:28 AM
Greetings,
I am developing outdoor benches and would appreciate feedback on the best solution for finishing them. I am working with roughsawn, 4-inch slabs of hardwood, primarily oak and hickory. The benches will be permanently installed outdoors, in the sun/shade/wind/rain/cold/heat. Thus, a durable, long-lasting finish is desired!
I have left the bark on the edges of the slabs and would like to finish the slabs in such a way that the bark remains as part of the bench.
Any suggestions?
Thanks,
Daryl
I have a bench made from a slab off an oak log that has been around for 28 years! ::) Is that possible? jeez Anyway, the guy that made it for me said that he coated it with linseed oil. Over the years, I occasionally give it a soaking covering of teak oil or what ever oil-based protectorant that I have. Nothing that makes a 'skin coat' is going to last, IMO.
Amen, Den. ;D
this is one of those questions I was wanting to ask a while back and forgot about it. I want to take a few of the larger branches/toped out and make a few selected benches back in the woods just using the chain saw & a few ole galv deck screws. protection I was thinking of using tompsones water sealer or something similar?
just glad someone asked about it to remind me.
marK
Nature always wins, let the lignin grey!! Reid
The bench I mentioned has no hardware. The guy bored four holes at a slight angle outward to make the bench stable. Then he took a white oak sapling and whittled four pieces to fit and hammered them into the holes. No nails at all.
Sikkens makes a great product. But it dont come cheap.
Dale