Ryan
Here’s a formulation for Brown Varnish that will make a nice, fast drying PC varnish. This recipe is slightly modified from the formula Kettenburg published in Muzzleblasts.
1 pint linseed oil
4 oz gum benzoin
4 oz rosin
1 teaspoon lead carbonate
1/4 – 1 pint of turpentine
Add the lead carbonate to cold linseed oil. Heat to 400 – 450 (F) for 30 to 45 minute with occasional stirring, then allow to cool. This is now boiled linseed oil (BLO). If you don’t have a high temperature thermometer, one period recipe calls for heating the oil until it will scorch a feather. This works. Feathers scorch at about 460 F according to my thermometer.
Grind the rosin and gum benzoin with a mortar and pestle, or marble rolling pin. The resins should be as fine as flour.
Dissolve rosin in 1/4 – 1 pint of turpentine by vigorous shaking in a glass jar for a couple of minutes. Add immediately to cold BLO.
Dissolve gum benzoin in ethyl alcohol and add immediately to cold BLO. Not all of the gum benzoin will dissolve, but get as much in solution as you can. Heat the BLO/resin solution slowly with constant stirring to 225-250 (F) for 10- 15 minutes. There will be some non-soluble black goo from the gum benzoin, but slow heating and constant stirring will minimize goo formation.
Gum benzoin is a real PITA to work with. It is impossible to get all of it in solution, and if you don’t raise the temperature slowly and stir a lot, you will end up with some big black gum balls. Kettenburg recommends filtering. I don’t filter because it is really hard to get the varnish to flow through any kind of filter. When I’m done cooking it, I just carefully decant it, leaving the solids in the pot. You lose a little oil, but it’s no big deal.
During the initial heating with the lead carbonate, at about 320 F you will see some fine bubbles forming, but no aggressive foaming. The bubbles indicate that the lead carbonate is going into solution. In my experience, after about 10 to 15 minutes the bubbles stop, indicating that the reaction is complete. So, the process window for oil temperature is about 320 to 630 degrees. Short heat times and low temperatures result in a thinner, honey colored BLO. Higher temperatures and longer heat times give you darker, thicker, faster drying BLO.
During the second heating, you will see the oil boil at about 168 degrees. This is the alcohol boiling off.
Use good linseed oil. I have had good luck with Varnish Maker’s Linseed Oil from Wood Finishing Enterprises. Personally, I wouldn’t use the lead you used. The pure lead carbonate from your link looks like a good product, and is actually made by a PC process.
I’ve also used WW grade rosin from Wood Finishing Enterprises. Here’s a link to some gum benzoin: http://woodworker.com/cgi-bin/FULLPRES.exe?PARTNUM=850-679m