48Rob wrote:Rob,
Epoxy is quite different than varnish or paint. Unthined Epoxy will bond to the surface of wood very well without deep penetration. Just do an experiment comparing a piece wood sealed using your method with varnish, and another piece sealed with unthined epoxy. Let them both cure for several weeks. Now... try to remove the varnish and the epoxy by scraping & or sanding. IMO/ experience, the epoxy will be much more difficult to remove, even though the surface is not penetrated deeply.
I have always understood that never thinning epoxy on something intended to seal out water is a good practice. For repairing rotted wood in a non structural application, it may be fine, but as Andrew, and Wests info states, thinned epoxy leaves a soft, porous surface that is not water proof.
Straight epoxy bonds well to bare wood, and leaves a semi hard flexible to
very hard rigid surface depending on the epoxy. The epoxy coating will be mostly water proof (depending on how many layers) and, much harder than a varnish only coating. Deep penetration does not appear to be necessary.
The epoxy does need to be protected from UV, and if finishing bright, varnish is a popular choice.
My $.02
Larry C.
Thank you Larry.
From reading all the posts about epoxy, it does seem to be/behave much differently than traditional finishes.
Does the epoxy adhere to, but not penetrate the wood, even the softer areas?
With paint or varnish, the softer wood would soak up the material like a sponge.
If it does "bridge" those areas, it sure would be an easier finish to apply!
Rob
Rob,
Epoxy does penetrate the wood, but not as much as your thinned varnish. I read about a controlled test that was done to see how much actual penetration epoxy had in Western Red Cedar, a popular boat building wood that is very soft. Contrary to popular belief, the actual penetration with an epoxy that is considered thin was only a few 1/1000ths of an inch. However, this seems to be enough to hang onto the wood without failure.
Yes it does soak into softer areas more, and it's a good practice to continue applying more epoxy to those areas. The practice I follow when laminating with fiberglass is to precoat the bare wood, and let it set up till it's tack free, and then apply the glass, and wet it out.
The seal coat helps prevent starving the glass in areas that the epoxy soaks into more than others (softer areas). If you wet the glass directly over the wood, the epoxy will soak in the softer areas more than others, possibly leaving the glass starved for epoxy in some areas.
If you know what you are looking for (resin starved glass), you can just keep adding more epoxy to these areas. However, those that are not experienced with direct laminating over wood, should probably do the seal coat method. Falling temperatures during application also help draw the epoxy into the wood.
I personally use the seal coat method to make the lightest possible layup for racing kayaks, but I also do direct lamination to save time if weight is not an issue.
Of course vacuum bagging probably offers the greatest epoxy penetration of all methods.
Larry C