Dan,
You said "Thicker oil is better for the fill coats on walnut." I thought you wanted it thinner to start with so it would penetrate better and then build up with thicker. Am I thinking/reading wrong?
Thanks, Tim C.
For seal I use the thinner oil mixed with Turpentine that has been aged. Then the thicker oil for *fill*. Then the thinner oil mixed with Grumbachers Oil Painting Medium III for final finish. I used this mix with turp for the seal on maple recently and it works very well so I will surely use it this way in the future.
Filling of walnut is not the same as sealing it. The heavy oil, and it will get like molasses if left exposed to the air in a cloth covered jar, thick skin to break through, will fill Black Walnut quicker, with less work than anything I have ever tried, including the "fillers", wet sanding etc etc.
Another thing the BLO fill coats do not dry as most people expect. When its dry enough to not stick in the steel wool I take it off. It will stay rubbery for weeks since LO does not dry "hard". Its not supposed to.
This what makes it a good stock finish. Even the varnishes made from it are "soft" unless high levels of resin is used. This is why the varnish will not crack when dented unless its very severely struck or the object cuts rather than dents. Hard finishes will break at the dent and "leak" moisture or they will not expand and contract with the wood, check or crack and will then pass water. When you see "flexible"used to describe a wood finish it means they can paint it on a metal bar, bend the bar and the film will stretch with the metal. This is not the same as elastic. Where the wood expands *and* shrinks the finish must follow.
Something that BLO or an oil varnish does very well.
There is no such thing as a waterproof finish for a gunstock.
The requirements are just too severe.
Water resistant is all you will get. Waterproof finishes just will not stand the temp changes and the abuse that a gunstock gets in use.
Yes straight BLO and some oil varnishes will turn milky if you hunt all day in rain or snow. Especially where the hands touch the finish. Adding some resin to the oil to make a varnish will greatly reduce this. But the effect is temporary with straight oil and the BLO will return the moisture to the atmosphere when the weather dries or the gun is moved indoors. Any wear to the finish is easily fixed with a little oil rubbed on to return the shine.
The average deep fat fryer will not "boil" the oil. I have used a propane camp stove to increase the temp but I cannot say I can see any difference in the oil. Overheating the oil can damage it. Something that can occur if making varnish with resins that require high temps to mix properly.
Lead will reduce the drying time in high humidity. Where I live this is not a great concern.
The darker oil gives a better look to the wood, stained or not, than transparent or even colored synthetic finished will. These often make the stock look painted with little "depth" to the finish. But with their rapid dry times they can be desirable where production in more important than looks.
This is where Permalyn, Tru-Oil etc came from. It drys much faster then store bought "BLO" which is a painters product not a stock finish. When many people think of BLO this is what comes to mind. But it is not what was used for stock finish until recent times.
Dan