Part wood part acrylic

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BigguyZ

Member
Joined
Aug 8, 2007
Messages
764
Location
Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA.
I once heard about wet sanding wood with mineral spirits, and I have to say that I've done that a lot since I first saw it and it works really well. So I do wet sand the majority of my wood blanks using MS. I also use MS for acrylics as well, since the drippage won't rust the tools/ lathe.
 

Rollerbob

Member
Joined
Apr 26, 2009
Messages
1,601
Location
Athens, Texas
I once heard about wet sanding wood with mineral spirits, and I have to say that I've done that a lot since I first saw it and it works really well. So I do wet sand the majority of my wood blanks using MS. I also use MS for acrylics as well, since the drippage won't rust the tools/ lathe.
Now there is some news you can use!! Thanks!:wink:
 

el_d

Member
Joined
Apr 26, 2007
Messages
3,368
Location
Lockhart, Tx, USA.
I once heard about wet sanding wood with mineral spirits, and I have to say that I've done that a lot since I first saw it and it works really well. So I do wet sand the majority of my wood blanks using MS. I also use MS for acrylics as well, since the drippage won't rust the tools/ lathe.

Does the MS color/discolor the wood or embed the slurry in the wood?
 

BigguyZ

Member
Joined
Aug 8, 2007
Messages
764
Location
Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA.
Does the MS color/discolor the wood or embed the slurry in the wood?

I've had no issues with that. The MS will darken the wood while it's wet (I've never had raised grain form MS on wood), but I always run the blank on the lathe with a dry rag pressed on the blank to heat/ dry it out. That, or just let it sit and flash off naturally (I'm too impatient, so I use the rag).

But I've had great results with this, and if I wanted to I can get a high gloss on bare wood (though it won't last once handled, what's what CA's for).
 
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