Moderator: eaglesdare
GPW wrote:The floor repair job went very well , but finding somebody to help me lift the cabin back on is problematic … All my neighbors are Old people … Useless …Difficult to hire four people for a 10 minute job …
I'm certainly glad I learned of "the Mix"; I used it on my upper structure very liberally, covered with pure poly and industrial outdoor equipment paint (6? coats), and it has made my TTT waterproof, so far...despite severe storms everytime I use it. I used at least 2 gallon of polyurethane just to combine with the "good stuff" (high VOC paint thinner) to make "the Mix", so that tells how much and how frequently I soaked all the plywood! My floor is where I started, before I read of "the Mix"; the floor is covered with pure poly, so much that it's nearly plastic, above a solid layer of Titebond2 sandwiching a seasoned birch plywood base (but I did/do soak the exposed edges with "the Mix"), with PL adhesive gluing it to the frame, and with automotive undercoating applied on the bottom (frequently checked, and recoated after every trip). Oh, I used no OSB anywhere, I'm happy to say.GPW wrote: … I’m all for using “the Mix”. I Know it really does work …The very last batch we made, we used the cheap paint thinner (says contents Mineral Spirits , the clear stuff NOT the milky substitute..) ~ $6/gal. and a quart of Varathane oil based clear gloss ~$10.00 and change . I poured out a quart of the paint thinner into another container and mixed the quart of varathane into the paint thinner jug … mixed it all up and had plenty for 4 coats on each side of the OSB nose floor. You can tell when it's doing it’s job when you can place a drop of water on the surface and it just sits there until it evaporates …
… also the surface gets and stays a little darker and develops a little shine . Do that if you really want it to last … "Trust me" …
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