Orange oil must be pretty close to lemon oil.I would try orange oil for a
change if I could find some.I'll start looking. it must be in our
supermarkets up here in the far north too.

 

Dwight Veinot

C&C 35 MKII, Alianna

Head of St. Margaret's Bay, NS

 

  _____  

From: CnC-List [mailto:cnc-list-boun...@cnc-list.com] On Behalf Of Edd
Schillay
Sent: April 23, 2013 3:03 PM
To: cnc-list@cnc-list.com
Subject: Re: Stus-List Burma Teak Oil

 

All,

 

            I've heard stories about teak oil causing people to get sea
sick, so I've stayed away from it down below. I do use teak products for the
wood (as little as there is) on deck. 

 

            For the interiors, as Rich says, the wood is already in great
shape. We rub in some orange oil from the supermarket and get rich
season-long results. 



          

          All the best,

 

          Edd

 

 

          Edd M. Schillay

          Starship Enterprise

          C&C 37+ | Sail No: NCC-1701-B

          City Island, NY 

          Starship <http://enterpriseb.blogspot.com/>  Enterprise's
Captain's Log Website

 

 

 

On Apr 23, 2013, at 1:56 PM, Knowles Rich <r...@sailpower.ca> wrote:





I'm curious why one would go to all the bother of prepping the interior wood
for a coat of whatever and choose anything other than a good quality flat or
rubbed finish varnish. The interiors of most of our boats were varnished at
the factory, and, after 20 or 30 years still look very good. Oil finishes
lose their lustre quickly and, as noted, harbour mould and attract dirt. 

 

Maybe oil is seen as less of a chore, but I think it's more in the long run.


Rich Knowles

Indigo. LF38

Halifax


On 2013-04-23, at 13:48, Josh Muckley <muckl...@gmail.com> wrote:

Joel,

That's what I found too and that's why I used danish oil.  As for lemon oil
that Dwight suggested, you can add some PURE lemon oil to almost any
traditional oil based finish (tung, linseed, teak, danish, even olive).  It
helps prevent mildew/black spots and also adds a nice fresh smell.

Some furniture makers make there own finishes, often by mixing boiled
linseed oil with bees wax and polyurethane.  I think the guy that made my
bed frame used a 2:1:1 ratio on natural bare cherry.

Josh

-- 
When security matters.
http://www.secure-my-email.com <http://www.secure-my-email.com/> 

On Apr 23, 2013 12:31 PM, "Joel Aronson" <joel.aron...@gmail.com> wrote:

I used Deks last year. The wood had not been treated in years so it soaked
it in. I need to reapply. It gave the wood a rich glow until it disappeared 

Joel Aronson

 

 

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