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Thank You I will. Lover of the US Constitution Wile E. Coyote School of DIY Disaster | |||
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I bought a Harbor Freight moisture tester. It's not as accurate as a multi hundred dollar one and doesn't have the wood species compensation but it seems to work OK and it's cheap enough to play with anyway. It is suggested to wait until the wood is at 12% or below before staining. https://www.harborfreight.com/...ure-meter-67143.html Collecting dust. | |||
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Exterior wood should be at a low moisture content prior to finishing, but since conditions vary greatly, we don't usually have a specific recommendation on moisture content. For the most part, if your substrate will absorb water, it will absorb TWP. We insist the wood have at least 2 good days of dry weather after cleaning or rain prior to staining. 12% is pretty low for exterior, usually we see it around 20%. Here's a link to our main page: TWP Home Page
My tongue swore, but my mind was still unpledged. | |||
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If you have access to a marine wood supplier use the 0.8CCA rated for the posts. I use 2.5 mostly because of its location on the water ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Live today as if it may be your last and learn today as if you will live forever | |||
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Well my fence is coming along nicely. Because of the suggestions on this thread and based on my research, I am currently using the Woodlife coppercoat recommended by arc, and after painting the TWP samples from cusingeorge's company, I'm going with TWP 100 in pecan color. In addition to treating the cut ends of my stringers with coppercoat, I'm also painting the end grain with an emulsified wax, for permanent water protection. I still haven't figured out how to premanently seal the pine architectural post caps however. After staining with TWP, I still want to put something on top to permanently seal the caps from water penetration. I'm looking to to the marine wood finising market, my thinking is if it works on a wood boat deck, it must be good. Any more suggestions of what I could seal the post caps with, after staining with the TWP brand fence/deck oil based stain, would be welcome. One caveat is 1) since it has to go on top of the TWP 100 oil, it should not be a water based product, and 2) it needs to seal out most if not all the rain possible, and 3) it should not add any gloss or any sheen similar to finished furniture. I want them to look exactly the same color and finish as the fence boards themselves. Some type of polymerized oil perhaps, it's a little confusing since most people building fences don't seem to care about the post caps being waterproof. Lover of the US Constitution Wile E. Coyote School of DIY Disaster | |||
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