robutacion
Member
Hi everyone,
I normally turn or finish some of my rough turnings from the previous years, only in Winter time but this time I had to change a few things around to accommodated a unexpected job, there is finish as many pieces I could to utilize a 1 litre of my expensive Floorseal that after 6 months in the shed with days of 45+C degrees and a few too many tin openings for coating my pen blanks samples that I do every so often, they used nothing of the varnish but it started getting jelly 4 days ago, and from experience, you get one go at it with plenty of thinning and stirring, withing 48 to 72 hours after the jelling process starts.
I didn't really wanted to waste a full litre of this product at about $58 so I got turning some of my dry rough turned pieces. One didn't make it, blowing in to pieces like a melon, another 2 gave me all sorts of troubles, as I turned them too thin while green and then I had to suffer the results of re-turning them to some shape and balance. The 2 Majestic Olive plates where a absolute nightmare, one was flown of the lathe when I was trying to finish it first a few months ago as a gift, never made it so I turned another one more successfully as a replacement, the other one is no more than 1mm thick in most of its body, reinforced with Golden Wattle in the ring and Colonial Gum on the base.
The first one end-up been reconstructed with a new base in Colonial Red, which after a small mistake, went flying again, braking the base for the second time so I decided to give it one more chance and made another base center out of She/Bull-Oak, living part of the previous repair out of the Ancient Red.
I could have turned a few more rough turned pieces but, I persisted with the beautiful pieces of Majestic Olive of those 2 plates, so I had to cut short of my plans, thinking of the possibility that one more day could be just too late for that varnish.
The plan was 2 1/2 days turning and half a day coating the pieces with sanding sealer and then one coat of the Floorseal. Off-course my days are short ones as I do maybe 4 hours of work each afternoon/evening, If I'm feel up to it so I got going as fast as I could. Yesterday afternoon I got the pieces sealed and coated with the Floorseal but I only manage to do the bottom of the pieces with it as the varnish wasn't thinning any more and spray gun was fighting with it all the way so, the varnish which normally dries quite quickly, this time wasn't drying as fast so I had to leave the pieces to be turned over and finished the next day.
Put the spray gun half full in the fridge overnight to slow the drying process and about lunch time I struggle to get a even coat on the pieces as the varnish was in its last legs...! I may shouldn't have used it at all, as the finish is far from what I could achieve with a fresh tin but, I didn't really bother too much as these pieces end-up in the house as ornaments like 100 of its mates...!
I don't put anything on consignment anymore, nor I do any shows or displays neither, whatever I feel like doing (turning) goes upstairs to the house and maybe if a visitor like some and wants to buy it/them, then I will think about it...! in the meantime the wife is not complaining anymore, about all the good stuff that was getting sold and she gets nothing proper, well... I reckon now she is thinking..."where in the heck am I going to put all this stuff, now...???":biggrin:
Anyway, I just though in share, what sort of saw-dust of have been breading lately...!

From above, left to right;
Mt. Compass Stone pine, Majestic Olive sapwood, Majestic olive heartwood, Majestic olive heartwood/sap.
From bellow, left to right;
Majestic Olive sapwood, Poplar, Majestic olive sapwood (flaws), Majestic olive heartwood/sap.
Cheers
George
I normally turn or finish some of my rough turnings from the previous years, only in Winter time but this time I had to change a few things around to accommodated a unexpected job, there is finish as many pieces I could to utilize a 1 litre of my expensive Floorseal that after 6 months in the shed with days of 45+C degrees and a few too many tin openings for coating my pen blanks samples that I do every so often, they used nothing of the varnish but it started getting jelly 4 days ago, and from experience, you get one go at it with plenty of thinning and stirring, withing 48 to 72 hours after the jelling process starts.
I didn't really wanted to waste a full litre of this product at about $58 so I got turning some of my dry rough turned pieces. One didn't make it, blowing in to pieces like a melon, another 2 gave me all sorts of troubles, as I turned them too thin while green and then I had to suffer the results of re-turning them to some shape and balance. The 2 Majestic Olive plates where a absolute nightmare, one was flown of the lathe when I was trying to finish it first a few months ago as a gift, never made it so I turned another one more successfully as a replacement, the other one is no more than 1mm thick in most of its body, reinforced with Golden Wattle in the ring and Colonial Gum on the base.
The first one end-up been reconstructed with a new base in Colonial Red, which after a small mistake, went flying again, braking the base for the second time so I decided to give it one more chance and made another base center out of She/Bull-Oak, living part of the previous repair out of the Ancient Red.
I could have turned a few more rough turned pieces but, I persisted with the beautiful pieces of Majestic Olive of those 2 plates, so I had to cut short of my plans, thinking of the possibility that one more day could be just too late for that varnish.
The plan was 2 1/2 days turning and half a day coating the pieces with sanding sealer and then one coat of the Floorseal. Off-course my days are short ones as I do maybe 4 hours of work each afternoon/evening, If I'm feel up to it so I got going as fast as I could. Yesterday afternoon I got the pieces sealed and coated with the Floorseal but I only manage to do the bottom of the pieces with it as the varnish wasn't thinning any more and spray gun was fighting with it all the way so, the varnish which normally dries quite quickly, this time wasn't drying as fast so I had to leave the pieces to be turned over and finished the next day.
Put the spray gun half full in the fridge overnight to slow the drying process and about lunch time I struggle to get a even coat on the pieces as the varnish was in its last legs...! I may shouldn't have used it at all, as the finish is far from what I could achieve with a fresh tin but, I didn't really bother too much as these pieces end-up in the house as ornaments like 100 of its mates...!
I don't put anything on consignment anymore, nor I do any shows or displays neither, whatever I feel like doing (turning) goes upstairs to the house and maybe if a visitor like some and wants to buy it/them, then I will think about it...! in the meantime the wife is not complaining anymore, about all the good stuff that was getting sold and she gets nothing proper, well... I reckon now she is thinking..."where in the heck am I going to put all this stuff, now...???":biggrin:
Anyway, I just though in share, what sort of saw-dust of have been breading lately...!


From above, left to right;
Mt. Compass Stone pine, Majestic Olive sapwood, Majestic olive heartwood, Majestic olive heartwood/sap.
From bellow, left to right;
Majestic Olive sapwood, Poplar, Majestic olive sapwood (flaws), Majestic olive heartwood/sap.
Cheers
George
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