T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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652.1 | Lemon Oil?? | TALLIS::KLOTZ | | Wed Sep 23 1987 18:00 | 15 |
| Sally,
I use a good Lemon Oil on all my Furniture and woodwork at home
with such good results that I decided to also use it for all
the interior wood on my boat - which happens to be oak - but;
I don't see why that wouldn't work as well on teak.
I'm curious to see what you get for answers here.
At any rate be sure - ABSLOUTELY SURE - that Al is the one assigned
to apply it.
Keep off the shallows,
Lou
|
652.2 | Use the real lemon on teak?? | MTBLUE::PEASE_DAVE | I said Id have to think about it | Thu Sep 24 1987 09:03 | 20 |
|
On Teak....
A friend says that the good way to do teak is to rub the lemon
itself on the teak because its the oil in the rind that does the work.
He mentioned this after I asked about a product that was available
at the Portland Me. boat show last Sunday, called PermaTeak. Its supposted
to last 12-18 months, has a slight coloring effect because of its UV
protection properties. Its made in Florida. Anybody have any thoughts or
experience on this stuff?? I can get more info from the literature if
needed.
BTW, I'm considering putting my 16' ComPac in the Boothbay area
next year. Its in fresh water now, and I may go back occasionally to fresh if I
get something bigger for the sea. Should I really put bottom paint on,
or pay the yard to hose the stuff off periodically?
Dave
|
652.3 | Barnacle heaven? | EXPERT::SPENCER | | Thu Sep 24 1987 13:38 | 11 |
| Dave,
> Should I really put bottom paint on, or pay the yard to hose the stuff
> off periodically?
Unless you plan to drysail it, put on bottom paint.
J.
|
652.4 | | GRAMPS::WCLARK | Walt Clark | Thu Sep 24 1987 16:29 | 13 |
| I have purchased a couple teak products and heard of a Scandanavian
builder that use bees wax on teak. I dont kno much more than that
but it sounds interesting.
I applied 3 coats of satin urethane finish to the interior teak
on our boat when it was new almost 4 years ago. It requires no
maintenance, and always looks "just oiled". Last season I recoated
a few areas that are highly visable (like the forward bulkhead in
the main cabin) or where wear was noticable (companionway steps)
which gave the finish a nice fresh sheen.
Walt
|
652.5 | don't varnish everything ... | MSCSSE::BERENS | Alan Berens | Thu Sep 24 1987 17:11 | 4 |
| I would never, ever, varnish a surface (companionway steps, cabin sole,
etc) that is walked on -- much too slippery when wet to be safe. Even
oiling should be kept to a minimum.
|
652.6 | Scotts Liqued Gold | CSSE::COUTURE | | Wed Sep 30 1987 12:42 | 4 |
| Following the advice of Practical Sailor, I've been using Scotts
Liqued Gold on my interior teak. It doesn't smell as strong as
teak oil and seems to do the trick. Also cheaper.
|
652.7 | Lemon Oil | MAMTS7::HAJOHNSON | | Thu Oct 29 1987 08:38 | 7 |
| I received my Hunter 37 with the interior just raw teak four years
ago. We used DecksOle #1 and were pleased with the results.
Each year we do Fornby's Lemon oil twice to keep it looking good
and smelling fresh. The lemon will absolutely not support
mildew...another benefit.
|