Don't use Epoxy to pre-seal your Wood!

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  • čas přidán 13. 04. 2023
  • I never use epoxy to stabilize or pre-seal wood before a pour. This is a short video explaining why.

Komentáře • 32

  • @p8ntblr1
    @p8ntblr1 Před 2 hodinami

    Have you used this on bark on a river table? I've always read you have to remove the bark when making a river table as it will be a weak point and will separate if you don't. Will PC petrifier fix that?

  • @robertmundy397
    @robertmundy397 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Great information makes a lot of sense

  • @mt.hoodcraft7899
    @mt.hoodcraft7899 Před rokem +1

    This is what I do, too. Sometimes I do pre-sand the live edge if it looks like the PC Petrifier cured on the surface, or more often I don’t use the PC Petrifier on that edge but just soak from the top and the bottom.

  • @SirFency
    @SirFency Před 3 měsíci +1

    exactly what I was looking for. I tried using epoxy and it was a fail. I use very rotten wood and bring it to life with epoxy resin. I think this is going to help me out tremendously.

  • @fiveduckstudio
    @fiveduckstudio Před rokem +1

    Thank you for the info!

  • @ucwoodsepoxy
    @ucwoodsepoxy Před rokem

    Fantastic 🎉 thanks for sharing!!

  • @josephgiguere
    @josephgiguere Před 29 dny

    I see this works good on punky wood. What about a white oak table top that is in great shape and freshly sanded to bare wood? The mfgr of the epoxy doesn't see how this applies to normal wood. They say use epoxy to seal and maybe polycrylic as an alternate.

  • @drewjohnson4673
    @drewjohnson4673 Před rokem +3

    Does your product reduce/prevent bubbles? Wouldn’t diluted polyurethane do the same thing?

    • @victormcox
      @victormcox Před 7 měsíci +1

      That's why I was searching these types of videos. I'm going to try the polyurethane as a sealer on plain pine then pour an epoxy flood coat. I'm really just trying to keep my costs down!😂 what do you think?

    • @drewjohnson4673
      @drewjohnson4673 Před 7 měsíci

      just gathering other people's thoughts.@@victormcox

    • @fjelstednord3159
      @fjelstednord3159  Před 3 měsíci

      I've used many other products as well as poly and it's been my experience that PC Petrifier works the best. If there was something better, I'd be using it

  • @tristannaylor5197
    @tristannaylor5197 Před 3 měsíci

    hey there great video! i have the exact same problem with the slabs im working with right now very punky, spalting beech wood.
    however for our certain situation, me personally, i would advise using something like total boat penetrating epoxy to seap into that punky wood to strengthen the wood. the piece you showed being really weak isnt gonna be strenghtend to the extent with the pc pour as much as the penetrating.
    but for regular wood that is not punky, i think your method using this pc product is a great way! also saves money since the epoxy can be expensive.

    • @fjelstednord3159
      @fjelstednord3159  Před 3 měsíci +1

      Actually, PC Petrifier will penetrate deeper than total boat pentrating epoxy and it still allows other epoxy to penetrate and chemically bond to the wood. I've tried many other "penetrating" epoxies and nothing works as good as PC Petrifier.

    • @tristannaylor5197
      @tristannaylor5197 Před 2 měsíci

      @@fjelstednord3159 yes it penetrates deeper but you need strength with the epoxy, you can thin out the epoxy with an aray of different chemicals, it works decently well. i will say if you could use a combination of this PC, and then a "top coat" of penetrating epoxy more on the top part of the wood i think thatd be best. especially for this punky wood type of project

  • @AMusicalPsychosis
    @AMusicalPsychosis Před 2 měsíci

    You recommend sanding after the pc petrifier or do you just go straight to the pour?

  • @jpp652
    @jpp652 Před 2 měsíci

    Thanks

  • @thelaymansminutes
    @thelaymansminutes Před 2 měsíci

    Have you tried total boat penetrating/sealer epoxy resin? It is less viscous than the table top epoxy and soaks into the wood.

  • @garyrichardson5164
    @garyrichardson5164 Před 2 měsíci

    If you color the epoxy, will the color bleed since the pours are left open?

  • @scottweathersby6659
    @scottweathersby6659 Před 27 dny

    I use water based polyurethane to seal or a marine product

  • @richardfoster8028
    @richardfoster8028 Před rokem

    I have never used PC Petrifyier... What does that do to help or hinder natural finishes like Odies, Osmo, or Rubio?

  • @colepeterson9993
    @colepeterson9993 Před rokem

    In the case you were surrounding a fully burnt slab with epoxy, how would you personally go about that? This is obviously a plan on mine.

    • @fjelstednord3159
      @fjelstednord3159  Před rokem

      Basically the same way. Saturate the charred wood with PC Petrifier, let it cure, then proceed with the epoxy

  • @weaponizedmath4369
    @weaponizedmath4369 Před měsícem

    Oh SURE ! Now ya tell me....! 😂

  • @hisimagenme
    @hisimagenme Před 6 měsíci

    Can you still stain the wood after you petrified it?

    • @fjelstednord3159
      @fjelstednord3159  Před 6 měsíci

      I've never tried it as I won't stain woods that I'm using for epoxy projects.

    • @hisimagenme
      @hisimagenme Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@fjelstednord3159 thank you for getting back to me. I ordered some of this so I'll call the company. Lovely piece you had there!! Thank you!

  • @Tyomad
    @Tyomad Před 10 měsíci

    Comparing apples to oranges with this test.

    • @fjelstednord3159
      @fjelstednord3159  Před 3 měsíci

      How do you figure? The point is to stabilize and harden the wood so epoxy can still penetrate and chemically bond to the wood fibers. Epoxy as a pre-sealer prevents that.

  • @Scott-ol9zs
    @Scott-ol9zs Před 20 dny

    get too the point god