Moderator: eaglesdare
GPW wrote:I used mine inside , outside , everywhere... No problem with UV , You Paint over it ... Just a waterproofer, not a final finish ...
Ps, I’ve been a painter for most of my 63 years ... wood that breathes soaks up water ...
GPW wrote:Just beware if you are going to glue it to another piece , do that BEFORE waterproofing it ... as the glue seems to work better just wood to wood , no sealer ... the glue replaces the sealer ... then you can waterproof over all that ...![]()
I built my first TD out of plywood , put it all together with screws and Glue , and before painting , just SOAKED it with about 4 coats of “the mix” ... then painted it ... Did just fine ...
I discussed this with a friend over breakfast this morning. He is a temporary wall contractor that covers store fronts that are being remodeled, and uses Luan by the pallet load. He told me since almost all paints and clear coatings available today no longer have high VOC's (solvents) the plywood industry has followed suit by replacing the solvent resistant glues with a cheaper glue that may be water resistant, but will easily delaminate when exposed to any solvent.
The veneers on luan are so thin, solvent can penetrate to the glues. He told me one of his employees was using a pallet of Luan as a work bench, and tipped over a gallon can of paint thinner. The thinner ran down the whole stack, and penetrated the the edges of most of the stack. As they were later using this stack, they discovered the paint thinner had softened the glue, and was delaminating the ply edges.
He told me the current Luan is very water resistant and they don't seal the edges at all when using it outside, but they can no longer use any solvent based coatings. They used to spray on a oil stain with garden sprayers to protect the luan A sign painter or Mural artist would follow. They now use a water based stain even though it is not as protective outdoors as the solvent based product. In cold weather they have to pre-coat the ply before going to the Job site, where previously they could spray the solvent based product even in Winter.
His suggestion when using Luan is to use the best water based products that are intended to seal plywood, and avoid anything with solvent in it.
Did you seal your plywood with deep penetrating epoxy, the one with all the solvents? Maybe that's why the delamination.
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