Shed
Best way to rejuvenate flaked and weathered timber on ship lap garden shed.
|
Shed
"guy1947" wrote in message
... Best way to rejuvenate flaked and weathered timber on ship lap garden shed. We cannot turn back the clock (viz. restore weight to outdoor timber that has lost weight, reattach flakes that have detached, etc.) To maintain functionality, the best bet may be to paint or spray with fibreglass resin (as used to coat timber boats.) -- Don Phillipson Carlsbad Springs (Ottawa, Canada) |
Shed
On Sep 8, 10:30*am, "Don Phillipson" wrote:
"guy1947" wrote in message ... Best way to rejuvenate flaked and weathered timber on ship lap garden shed. We cannot turn back the clock (viz. restore weight to outdoor timber that has lost weight, reattach flakes that have detached, etc.) *To maintain functionality, the best bet may be to paint or spray with fibreglass resin (as used to coat timber boats.) Perhaps a naive question, but wouldn't soaking the timber restore weight? Perhaps harder to do with vertical members, but would daily spraying help? HB -- Don Phillipson Carlsbad Springs (Ottawa, Canada) |
Shed
Higgs Boson wrote:
On Sep 8, 10:30 am, "Don Phillipson" wrote: "guy1947" wrote in message ... Best way to rejuvenate flaked and weathered timber on ship lap garden shed. We cannot turn back the clock (viz. restore weight to outdoor timber that has lost weight, reattach flakes that have detached, etc.) To maintain functionality, the best bet may be to paint or spray with fibreglass resin (as used to coat timber boats.) Perhaps a naive question, but wouldn't soaking the timber restore weight? Perhaps harder to do with vertical members, but would daily spraying help? No it will only hasten the decay, the surface needs to be cleaned and sealed in some way to keep out water. |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 11:30 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
GardenBanter