• Another Job

    From Leon@21:1/5 to All on Fri Sep 17 13:50:30 2021
    So far this year a kitchen remodel in the winter and early spring. A
    Murphy bed and twin tower storage cabinets to match the bed and not a
    Pantry Hutch.

    This is the drawing.

    https://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/51487087793/in/dateposted/

    This will be constructed of 3/4" MDO for the cabinet carcasses and
    adjustable shelves.

    Poplar for all of the solid wood, except for Maple of the tops of the
    bottom and top cabinets.

    Drawers will have HD full extension drawer slides, 8 adjustable feet for leveling, and 6 Blum Euro hinges for the doors.

    Door and drawer outer center panels will be 1/2" Baltic birch and the
    drawers will be 1/2" Baltic birch for the all 4 sides and the bottoms.
    Rabbets for the drawer corner joints reinforced by Domino tenons.

    The customer will retrieve and take back to San Antonio, TX, spray
    paint the poplar and MOD parts. Clear coat the maple sections and
    reassemble. The customer was a long time participant in this group. He
    often passed along very detailed directions of how to spray paint.

    Since I am not painting, staining, or applying a finishing for any part
    of this job, the job should be fun.

    I paid close attention when cutting up the $420 worth of MDO. That part
    is done. I just finished printing optomized layouts for cutting up the
    120 linear feet of 1x8 poplar and hard maple.

    Thoughts?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From DerbyDad03@21:1/5 to Leon on Fri Sep 17 15:11:08 2021
    On Friday, September 17, 2021 at 2:50:39 PM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
    So far this year a kitchen remodel in the winter and early spring. A
    Murphy bed and twin tower storage cabinets to match the bed and not a
    Pantry Hutch.

    This is the drawing.

    https://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/51487087793/in/dateposted/

    This will be constructed of 3/4" MDO for the cabinet carcasses and
    adjustable shelves.

    Poplar for all of the solid wood, except for Maple of the tops of the
    bottom and top cabinets.

    Drawers will have HD full extension drawer slides, 8 adjustable feet for leveling, and 6 Blum Euro hinges for the doors.

    Door and drawer outer center panels will be 1/2" Baltic birch and the
    drawers will be 1/2" Baltic birch for the all 4 sides and the bottoms. Rabbets for the drawer corner joints reinforced by Domino tenons.

    The customer will retrieve and take back to San Antonio, TX, spray
    paint the poplar and MOD parts. Clear coat the maple sections and
    reassemble. The customer was a long time participant in this group. He
    often passed along very detailed directions of how to spray paint.

    Since I am not painting, staining, or applying a finishing for any part
    of this job, the job should be fun.

    I paid close attention when cutting up the $420 worth of MDO. That part
    is done. I just finished printing optomized layouts for cutting up the
    120 linear feet of 1x8 poplar and hard maple.

    Thoughts?

    Thoughts?

    My thought is that you should make two. The first one can be for practice.
    When it's done, give it to me at no charge since it's just a prototype.

    Thoughts?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From ritzannaseaton@gmail.com@21:1/5 to Leon on Fri Sep 17 16:00:30 2021
    On Friday, September 17, 2021 at 1:50:39 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote:

    Since I am not painting, staining, or applying a finishing for any part
    of this job, the job should be fun.

    True!!!!!! I like the mechanical constructing part. Not the finishing part.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From krw@notreal.com@21:1/5 to ritzannaseaton@gmail.com on Fri Sep 17 22:28:56 2021
    On Fri, 17 Sep 2021 16:00:30 -0700 (PDT), "russellseaton1@yahoo.com" <ritzannaseaton@gmail.com> wrote:

    On Friday, September 17, 2021 at 1:50:39 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote:

    Since I am not painting, staining, or applying a finishing for any part
    of this job, the job should be fun.

    True!!!!!! I like the mechanical constructing part. Not the finishing part.

    Thoughts? Where do you find MDO?

    Oh, and it's going to be another Leon special, no doubt.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Leon@21:1/5 to russellseaton1@yahoo.com on Sat Sep 18 09:14:51 2021
    On 9/17/2021 6:00 PM, russellseaton1@yahoo.com wrote:
    On Friday, September 17, 2021 at 1:50:39 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote:

    Since I am not painting, staining, or applying a finishing for any part
    of this job, the job should be fun.

    True!!!!!! I like the mechanical constructing part. Not the finishing part.



    Finishing does not bother me so much except for the time it adds to
    complete a project. I almost always prefinish inside edges and closed
    in panels prior to glue up. 3 coats of a gel varnish. Then after the
    glue up 3 coats after sanding. That can easily add 2~8 days to the
    process depending on the humidity.

    And gel varnishes do not build quickly so they are thin. Not for
    children's furniture.

    Because this finish basically helps to prevent discoloration of the wood
    and that is about it I am considering switching to Rubio Monocoat
    finish. It too is a thin finish but it is 1 coat, fast dry, and applied
    with either a white Scotch Brite pad or poured on a tiny bit at a time
    and spread with a card scraper.
    Comes in about 40~50 shades including pure/natural. And it is pricey.
    But when time is money I think it is a wash.

    Apparently a scratch is easily repaired, sand, and reapply 1 coat. No
    lap marks.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Leon@21:1/5 to All on Sat Sep 18 09:05:53 2021
    On 9/17/2021 5:11 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Friday, September 17, 2021 at 2:50:39 PM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
    So far this year a kitchen remodel in the winter and early spring. A
    Murphy bed and twin tower storage cabinets to match the bed and not a
    Pantry Hutch.

    This is the drawing.

    https://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/51487087793/in/dateposted/

    This will be constructed of 3/4" MDO for the cabinet carcasses and
    adjustable shelves.

    Poplar for all of the solid wood, except for Maple of the tops of the
    bottom and top cabinets.

    Drawers will have HD full extension drawer slides, 8 adjustable feet for
    leveling, and 6 Blum Euro hinges for the doors.

    Door and drawer outer center panels will be 1/2" Baltic birch and the
    drawers will be 1/2" Baltic birch for the all 4 sides and the bottoms.
    Rabbets for the drawer corner joints reinforced by Domino tenons.

    The customer will retrieve and take back to San Antonio, TX, spray
    paint the poplar and MOD parts. Clear coat the maple sections and
    reassemble. The customer was a long time participant in this group. He
    often passed along very detailed directions of how to spray paint.

    Since I am not painting, staining, or applying a finishing for any part
    of this job, the job should be fun.

    I paid close attention when cutting up the $420 worth of MDO. That part
    is done. I just finished printing optomized layouts for cutting up the
    120 linear feet of 1x8 poplar and hard maple.

    Thoughts?

    Thoughts?

    My thought is that you should make two. The first one can be for practice. When it's done, give it to me at no charge since it's just a prototype.

    Thoughts?

    Naaa.

    I hate doing prototypes. Its like cutting a board 3" shorter. I know
    how to do this! ;~)

    Last prototype I build was in the early 80's.

    Last Christmas I was going to build boxes with 1/4" box joints with 1/2"
    thick material. The box joints were 1/4" square, not 1/4" by 1/2".

    And I wanted to use my new Origin to do this.

    Long story short, I practiced the cut on scraps and they came out
    perfect. I turned the scraps into 2 of the 12 boxes.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Leon@21:1/5 to krw@notreal.com on Sat Sep 18 09:23:03 2021
    On 9/17/2021 9:28 PM, krw@notreal.com wrote:
    On Fri, 17 Sep 2021 16:00:30 -0700 (PDT), "russellseaton1@yahoo.com" <ritzannaseaton@gmail.com> wrote:

    On Friday, September 17, 2021 at 1:50:39 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote:

    Since I am not painting, staining, or applying a finishing for any part
    of this job, the job should be fun.

    True!!!!!! I like the mechanical constructing part. Not the finishing part.

    Thoughts? Where do you find MDO?

    I get it in Houston at either Clark's Hardwood Lumber or Hardwood
    Products. At the moment Hardwood Products is out of stock and has no
    idea when that will change. I suspect it may be available form any of
    the local materials suppliers for the trades. A local lumber yard may
    have it. The big box store "might" be able to order it for you.


    Oh, and it's going to be another Leon special, no doubt.


    Not totally my design, Nailshooter and his wife had a lot of input as to sizing. They have stayed with us on numerous occasions and she wanted a
    custom built piece. It has some of my unique features but no curves...
    Hummm.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From DerbyDad03@21:1/5 to Leon on Sat Sep 18 08:02:08 2021
    On Saturday, September 18, 2021 at 10:14:59 AM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
    On 9/17/2021 6:00 PM, russell...@yahoo.com wrote:
    On Friday, September 17, 2021 at 1:50:39 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote:

    Since I am not painting, staining, or applying a finishing for any part
    of this job, the job should be fun.

    True!!!!!! I like the mechanical constructing part. Not the finishing part.

    Finishing does not bother me so much except for the time it adds to
    complete a project. I almost always prefinish inside edges and closed
    in panels prior to glue up. 3 coats of a gel varnish. Then after the
    glue up 3 coats after sanding. That can easily add 2~8 days to the
    process depending on the humidity.

    And gel varnishes do not build quickly so they are thin. Not for
    children's furniture.

    Because this finish basically helps to prevent discoloration of the wood
    and that is about it I am considering switching to Rubio Monocoat
    finish. It too is a thin finish but it is 1 coat, fast dry, and applied
    with either a white Scotch Brite pad or poured on a tiny bit at a time
    and spread with a card scraper.
    Comes in about 40~50 shades including pure/natural. And it is pricey.
    But when time is money I think it is a wash.

    Apparently a scratch is easily repaired, sand, and reapply 1 coat. No
    lap marks.

    But who will repair the scratch 3 years after delivery? Are you the service department also or will you hand the customer whatever finish is left over, assuming there is some?

    (I had a guy repair some rusty gussets, etc. on my trailer. Small job, but I don't weld. Some welding, some priming, some painting. He billed me for
    quart of black paint, the remainder of which he gave to me when I picked
    up the the trailer. Now I have about 85% of a quart of flat black oil based paint that will probably never get used. I should have given it to him as a tip.)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From krw@notreal.com@21:1/5 to All on Sat Sep 18 12:30:55 2021
    On Sat, 18 Sep 2021 09:23:03 -0500, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
    wrote:

    On 9/17/2021 9:28 PM, krw@notreal.com wrote:
    On Fri, 17 Sep 2021 16:00:30 -0700 (PDT), "russellseaton1@yahoo.com"
    <ritzannaseaton@gmail.com> wrote:

    On Friday, September 17, 2021 at 1:50:39 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote:

    Since I am not painting, staining, or applying a finishing for any part >>>> of this job, the job should be fun.

    True!!!!!! I like the mechanical constructing part. Not the finishing part.

    Thoughts? Where do you find MDO?

    I get it in Houston at either Clark's Hardwood Lumber or Hardwood
    Products. At the moment Hardwood Products is out of stock and has no
    idea when that will change. I suspect it may be available form any of
    the local materials suppliers for the trades. A local lumber yard may
    have it. The big box store "might" be able to order it for you.

    The BORG doesn't even recognize its existence and blue knows that it
    exists but will never stock it. We have no "lumber yards", as we know
    them, around. I'll have to get to one of the hardwood dealers but they
    seem to have normal business hours.

    Oh, and it's going to be another Leon special, no doubt.


    Not totally my design, Nailshooter and his wife had a lot of input as to >sizing. They have stayed with us on numerous occasions and she wanted a >custom built piece. It has some of my unique features but no curves...
    Hummm.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From DerbyDad03@21:1/5 to k...@notreal.com on Sat Sep 18 12:03:54 2021
    On Saturday, September 18, 2021 at 12:31:02 PM UTC-4, k...@notreal.com wrote:
    On Sat, 18 Sep 2021 09:23:03 -0500, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
    wrote:
    On 9/17/2021 9:28 PM, k...@notreal.com wrote:
    On Fri, 17 Sep 2021 16:00:30 -0700 (PDT), "russell...@yahoo.com"
    <ritzann...@gmail.com> wrote:

    On Friday, September 17, 2021 at 1:50:39 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote:

    Since I am not painting, staining, or applying a finishing for any part >>>> of this job, the job should be fun.

    True!!!!!! I like the mechanical constructing part. Not the finishing part.

    Thoughts? Where do you find MDO?

    I get it in Houston at either Clark's Hardwood Lumber or Hardwood
    Products. At the moment Hardwood Products is out of stock and has no
    idea when that will change. I suspect it may be available form any of
    the local materials suppliers for the trades. A local lumber yard may
    have it. The big box store "might" be able to order it for you.
    The BORG doesn't even recognize its existence and blue knows that it
    exists but will never stock it.

    Lowes carries 1/2 MDO. At least 50 sheets available locally.

    I bought some a few weeks ago. I really only needed sanded ply but
    the nice flat and slightly thicker MDO was a few bucks *cheaper* per
    sheet than the ugly twisted sanded ply.

    Can't find 3/4" though. Will try a lumber yard if I ever need any.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From krw@notreal.com@21:1/5 to teamarrows@eznet.net on Sat Sep 18 15:25:24 2021
    On Sat, 18 Sep 2021 12:03:54 -0700 (PDT), DerbyDad03
    <teamarrows@eznet.net> wrote:

    On Saturday, September 18, 2021 at 12:31:02 PM UTC-4, k...@notreal.com wrote: >> On Sat, 18 Sep 2021 09:23:03 -0500, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
    wrote:
    On 9/17/2021 9:28 PM, k...@notreal.com wrote:
    On Fri, 17 Sep 2021 16:00:30 -0700 (PDT), "russell...@yahoo.com"
    <ritzann...@gmail.com> wrote:

    On Friday, September 17, 2021 at 1:50:39 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote:

    Since I am not painting, staining, or applying a finishing for any part >> >>>> of this job, the job should be fun.

    True!!!!!! I like the mechanical constructing part. Not the finishing part.

    Thoughts? Where do you find MDO?

    I get it in Houston at either Clark's Hardwood Lumber or Hardwood
    Products. At the moment Hardwood Products is out of stock and has no
    idea when that will change. I suspect it may be available form any of
    the local materials suppliers for the trades. A local lumber yard may
    have it. The big box store "might" be able to order it for you.
    The BORG doesn't even recognize its existence and blue knows that it
    exists but will never stock it.

    Lowes carries 1/2 MDO. At least 50 sheets available locally.

    Not here, in any stores in the metro area, or at least their web site
    doesn't point to any.

    I bought some a few weeks ago. I really only needed sanded ply but
    the nice flat and slightly thicker MDO was a few bucks *cheaper* per
    sheet than the ugly twisted sanded ply.

    The BORG did have some decent looking sanded ply. I just looked at
    the Lowes site and it appears plywood prices have come down. $40 for
    3/4" sanded SYP and $60 for sanded poplar.

    Can't find 3/4" though. Will try a lumber yard if I ever need any.

    I'd love to find some. I've been using MDF or melamine (same thing)
    where flat mattered.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From DerbyDad03@21:1/5 to k...@notreal.com on Sat Sep 18 16:59:19 2021
    On Saturday, September 18, 2021 at 3:25:31 PM UTC-4, k...@notreal.com wrote:
    On Sat, 18 Sep 2021 12:03:54 -0700 (PDT), DerbyDad03
    <teama...@eznet.net> wrote:

    On Saturday, September 18, 2021 at 12:31:02 PM UTC-4, k...@notreal.com wrote:
    On Sat, 18 Sep 2021 09:23:03 -0500, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
    wrote:
    On 9/17/2021 9:28 PM, k...@notreal.com wrote:
    On Fri, 17 Sep 2021 16:00:30 -0700 (PDT), "russell...@yahoo.com"
    <ritzann...@gmail.com> wrote:

    On Friday, September 17, 2021 at 1:50:39 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote:

    Since I am not painting, staining, or applying a finishing for any part
    of this job, the job should be fun.

    True!!!!!! I like the mechanical constructing part. Not the finishing part.

    Thoughts? Where do you find MDO?

    I get it in Houston at either Clark's Hardwood Lumber or Hardwood
    Products. At the moment Hardwood Products is out of stock and has no
    idea when that will change. I suspect it may be available form any of
    the local materials suppliers for the trades. A local lumber yard may
    have it. The big box store "might" be able to order it for you.
    The BORG doesn't even recognize its existence and blue knows that it
    exists but will never stock it.

    Lowes carries 1/2 MDO. At least 50 sheets available locally.
    Not here, in any stores in the metro area, or at least their web site
    doesn't point to any.
    I bought some a few weeks ago. I really only needed sanded ply but
    the nice flat and slightly thicker MDO was a few bucks *cheaper* per
    sheet than the ugly twisted sanded ply.
    The BORG did have some decent looking sanded ply. I just looked at
    the Lowes site and it appears plywood prices have come down. $40 for
    3/4" sanded SYP and $60 for sanded poplar.

    Can't find 3/4" though. Will try a lumber yard if I ever need any.

    I'd love to find some. I've been using MDF or melamine (same thing)
    where flat mattered.

    In what world is MDF and melamine the same thing?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Leon@21:1/5 to All on Sun Sep 19 09:07:29 2021
    On 9/18/2021 6:59 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Saturday, September 18, 2021 at 3:25:31 PM UTC-4, k...@notreal.com wrote:
    On Sat, 18 Sep 2021 12:03:54 -0700 (PDT), DerbyDad03
    <teama...@eznet.net> wrote:

    On Saturday, September 18, 2021 at 12:31:02 PM UTC-4, k...@notreal.com wrote:
    On Sat, 18 Sep 2021 09:23:03 -0500, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
    wrote:
    On 9/17/2021 9:28 PM, k...@notreal.com wrote:
    On Fri, 17 Sep 2021 16:00:30 -0700 (PDT), "russell...@yahoo.com"
    <ritzann...@gmail.com> wrote:

    On Friday, September 17, 2021 at 1:50:39 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote:

    Since I am not painting, staining, or applying a finishing for any part
    of this job, the job should be fun.

    True!!!!!! I like the mechanical constructing part. Not the finishing part.

    Thoughts? Where do you find MDO?

    I get it in Houston at either Clark's Hardwood Lumber or Hardwood
    Products. At the moment Hardwood Products is out of stock and has no >>>>> idea when that will change. I suspect it may be available form any of >>>>> the local materials suppliers for the trades. A local lumber yard may >>>>> have it. The big box store "might" be able to order it for you.
    The BORG doesn't even recognize its existence and blue knows that it
    exists but will never stock it.

    Lowes carries 1/2 MDO. At least 50 sheets available locally.
    Not here, in any stores in the metro area, or at least their web site
    doesn't point to any.
    I bought some a few weeks ago. I really only needed sanded ply but
    the nice flat and slightly thicker MDO was a few bucks *cheaper* per
    sheet than the ugly twisted sanded ply.
    The BORG did have some decent looking sanded ply. I just looked at
    the Lowes site and it appears plywood prices have come down. $40 for
    3/4" sanded SYP and $60 for sanded poplar.

    Can't find 3/4" though. Will try a lumber yard if I ever need any.

    I'd love to find some. I've been using MDF or melamine (same thing)
    where flat mattered.

    In what world is MDF and melamine the same thing?



    Wondering the same. ;~) Maybe just for the flatness comparison.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Leon@21:1/5 to All on Sun Sep 19 09:05:43 2021
    On 9/18/2021 2:03 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Saturday, September 18, 2021 at 12:31:02 PM UTC-4, k...@notreal.com wrote:
    On Sat, 18 Sep 2021 09:23:03 -0500, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
    wrote:
    On 9/17/2021 9:28 PM, k...@notreal.com wrote:
    On Fri, 17 Sep 2021 16:00:30 -0700 (PDT), "russell...@yahoo.com"
    <ritzann...@gmail.com> wrote:

    On Friday, September 17, 2021 at 1:50:39 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote:

    Since I am not painting, staining, or applying a finishing for any part >>>>>> of this job, the job should be fun.

    True!!!!!! I like the mechanical constructing part. Not the finishing part.

    Thoughts? Where do you find MDO?

    I get it in Houston at either Clark's Hardwood Lumber or Hardwood
    Products. At the moment Hardwood Products is out of stock and has no
    idea when that will change. I suspect it may be available form any of
    the local materials suppliers for the trades. A local lumber yard may
    have it. The big box store "might" be able to order it for you.
    The BORG doesn't even recognize its existence and blue knows that it
    exists but will never stock it.

    Lowes carries 1/2 MDO. At least 50 sheets available locally.

    I bought some a few weeks ago. I really only needed sanded ply but
    the nice flat and slightly thicker MDO was a few bucks *cheaper* per
    sheet than the ugly twisted sanded ply.

    AND the surface likes any kind of paint. Some wood veneer plywoods tend
    to de laminate with some water based finishes. And that is the primary
    reason that I use MDO over wood veneer if I am going to paint.



    Can't find 3/4" though. Will try a lumber yard if I ever need any.






    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Leon@21:1/5 to All on Sun Sep 19 09:13:31 2021
    On 9/18/2021 10:02 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Saturday, September 18, 2021 at 10:14:59 AM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
    On 9/17/2021 6:00 PM, russell...@yahoo.com wrote:
    On Friday, September 17, 2021 at 1:50:39 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote:

    Since I am not painting, staining, or applying a finishing for any part >>>> of this job, the job should be fun.

    True!!!!!! I like the mechanical constructing part. Not the finishing part. >>>
    Finishing does not bother me so much except for the time it adds to
    complete a project. I almost always prefinish inside edges and closed
    in panels prior to glue up. 3 coats of a gel varnish. Then after the
    glue up 3 coats after sanding. That can easily add 2~8 days to the
    process depending on the humidity.

    And gel varnishes do not build quickly so they are thin. Not for
    children's furniture.

    Because this finish basically helps to prevent discoloration of the wood
    and that is about it I am considering switching to Rubio Monocoat
    finish. It too is a thin finish but it is 1 coat, fast dry, and applied
    with either a white Scotch Brite pad or poured on a tiny bit at a time
    and spread with a card scraper.
    Comes in about 40~50 shades including pure/natural. And it is pricey.
    But when time is money I think it is a wash.

    Apparently a scratch is easily repaired, sand, and reapply 1 coat. No
    lap marks.

    But who will repair the scratch 3 years after delivery? Are you the service department also or will you hand the customer whatever finish is left over, assuming there is some?

    Good question. But ask your self this question, with "ANY" other
    finish, who will repair the scratch 3 years after delivery?

    The customer can buy $10 sample bottles of the product and do the repair himself. With most any other finish that repair will be much more
    detailed, even with shellac.

    And until I have tested this product more I don't know if it will be
    good for everything or just certain projects. Like any other finish.



    (I had a guy repair some rusty gussets, etc. on my trailer. Small job, but I don't weld. Some welding, some priming, some painting. He billed me for
    quart of black paint, the remainder of which he gave to me when I picked
    up the the trailer. Now I have about 85% of a quart of flat black oil based paint that will probably never get used. I should have given it to him as a tip.)


    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From DerbyDad03@21:1/5 to Leon on Sun Sep 19 09:02:12 2021
    On Sunday, September 19, 2021 at 10:13:39 AM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
    On 9/18/2021 10:02 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Saturday, September 18, 2021 at 10:14:59 AM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
    On 9/17/2021 6:00 PM, russell...@yahoo.com wrote:
    On Friday, September 17, 2021 at 1:50:39 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote:

    Since I am not painting, staining, or applying a finishing for any part >>>> of this job, the job should be fun.

    True!!!!!! I like the mechanical constructing part. Not the finishing part.

    Finishing does not bother me so much except for the time it adds to
    complete a project. I almost always prefinish inside edges and closed
    in panels prior to glue up. 3 coats of a gel varnish. Then after the
    glue up 3 coats after sanding. That can easily add 2~8 days to the
    process depending on the humidity.

    And gel varnishes do not build quickly so they are thin. Not for
    children's furniture.

    Because this finish basically helps to prevent discoloration of the wood >> and that is about it I am considering switching to Rubio Monocoat
    finish. It too is a thin finish but it is 1 coat, fast dry, and applied
    with either a white Scotch Brite pad or poured on a tiny bit at a time
    and spread with a card scraper.
    Comes in about 40~50 shades including pure/natural. And it is pricey.
    But when time is money I think it is a wash.

    Apparently a scratch is easily repaired, sand, and reapply 1 coat. No
    lap marks.

    But who will repair the scratch 3 years after delivery? Are you the service department also or will you hand the customer whatever finish is left over, assuming there is some?

    Good question. But ask your self this question, with "ANY" other
    finish, who will repair the scratch 3 years after delivery?

    Depends on the terms of the warranty/protection plan. At this very
    moment I am looking at a brochure for the Platinum Protection Plan
    offered by the Raymour & Flanigan furniture chain. That's their 5
    year protection plan.

    The column for Wood and Other Hard Surface Furniture has a checkbox
    next to "Gouges or chips that penetrate the finish exposing the substrate." That box is checked.


    The customer can buy $10 sample bottles of the product and do the repair himself. With most any other finish that repair will be much more
    detailed, even with shellac.

    So, what I am hearing is that you aren't offering a 5 year Platinum
    Protection Plan. ;-)


    And until I have tested this product more I don't know if it will be
    good for everything or just certain projects. Like any other finish.


    (I had a guy repair some rusty gussets, etc. on my trailer. Small job, but I
    don't weld. Some welding, some priming, some painting. He billed me for quart of black paint, the remainder of which he gave to me when I picked
    up the the trailer. Now I have about 85% of a quart of flat black oil based paint that will probably never get used. I should have given it to him as a tip.)


    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From DerbyDad03@21:1/5 to Leon on Sun Sep 19 09:13:22 2021
    On Sunday, September 19, 2021 at 10:05:52 AM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
    On 9/18/2021 2:03 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Saturday, September 18, 2021 at 12:31:02 PM UTC-4, k...@notreal.com wrote:
    On Sat, 18 Sep 2021 09:23:03 -0500, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
    wrote:
    On 9/17/2021 9:28 PM, k...@notreal.com wrote:
    On Fri, 17 Sep 2021 16:00:30 -0700 (PDT), "russell...@yahoo.com"
    <ritzann...@gmail.com> wrote:

    On Friday, September 17, 2021 at 1:50:39 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote:

    Since I am not painting, staining, or applying a finishing for any part
    of this job, the job should be fun.

    True!!!!!! I like the mechanical constructing part. Not the finishing part.

    Thoughts? Where do you find MDO?

    I get it in Houston at either Clark's Hardwood Lumber or Hardwood
    Products. At the moment Hardwood Products is out of stock and has no
    idea when that will change. I suspect it may be available form any of
    the local materials suppliers for the trades. A local lumber yard may
    have it. The big box store "might" be able to order it for you.
    The BORG doesn't even recognize its existence and blue knows that it
    exists but will never stock it.

    Lowes carries 1/2 MDO. At least 50 sheets available locally.

    I bought some a few weeks ago. I really only needed sanded ply but
    the nice flat and slightly thicker MDO was a few bucks *cheaper* per
    sheet than the ugly twisted sanded ply.
    AND the surface likes any kind of paint. Some wood veneer plywoods tend
    to de laminate with some water based finishes. And that is the primary
    reason that I use MDO over wood veneer if I am going to paint.


    That's good to know. I used 3/4 Poplar veneered plywood for my last big project. It took the Benjamin Moore Advance primer and paint really well.
    I like that paint a lot, especially since I seriously hate to paint. It lays down
    nice and smooth.

    The ultra smooth surface of the MDO isn't a problem? What kind of primer & paint do you use?

    When I used the 1/2" MDO, I hid the surface. It was for that platform project in my Honda Odyssey, so it got covered with carpet. As I mentioned, I never would have considered using MDO, but it was cheaper than the sanded ply
    and flat, unlike the sanded ply.

    It was a good introduction to MDO, even though I didn't actually "finish" it.
    I will consider using it in the future.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From krw@notreal.com@21:1/5 to All on Sun Sep 19 19:57:29 2021
    On Sun, 19 Sep 2021 09:07:29 -0500, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
    wrote:

    On 9/18/2021 6:59 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Saturday, September 18, 2021 at 3:25:31 PM UTC-4, k...@notreal.com wrote: >>> On Sat, 18 Sep 2021 12:03:54 -0700 (PDT), DerbyDad03
    <teama...@eznet.net> wrote:

    On Saturday, September 18, 2021 at 12:31:02 PM UTC-4, k...@notreal.com wrote:
    On Sat, 18 Sep 2021 09:23:03 -0500, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
    wrote:
    On 9/17/2021 9:28 PM, k...@notreal.com wrote:
    On Fri, 17 Sep 2021 16:00:30 -0700 (PDT), "russell...@yahoo.com" >>>>>>> <ritzann...@gmail.com> wrote:

    On Friday, September 17, 2021 at 1:50:39 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote: >>>>>>>>>
    Since I am not painting, staining, or applying a finishing for any part
    of this job, the job should be fun.

    True!!!!!! I like the mechanical constructing part. Not the finishing part.

    Thoughts? Where do you find MDO?

    I get it in Houston at either Clark's Hardwood Lumber or Hardwood
    Products. At the moment Hardwood Products is out of stock and has no >>>>>> idea when that will change. I suspect it may be available form any of >>>>>> the local materials suppliers for the trades. A local lumber yard may >>>>>> have it. The big box store "might" be able to order it for you.
    The BORG doesn't even recognize its existence and blue knows that it >>>>> exists but will never stock it.

    Lowes carries 1/2 MDO. At least 50 sheets available locally.
    Not here, in any stores in the metro area, or at least their web site
    doesn't point to any.
    I bought some a few weeks ago. I really only needed sanded ply but
    the nice flat and slightly thicker MDO was a few bucks *cheaper* per
    sheet than the ugly twisted sanded ply.
    The BORG did have some decent looking sanded ply. I just looked at
    the Lowes site and it appears plywood prices have come down. $40 for
    3/4" sanded SYP and $60 for sanded poplar.

    Can't find 3/4" though. Will try a lumber yard if I ever need any.

    I'd love to find some. I've been using MDF or melamine (same thing)
    where flat mattered.

    In what world is MDF and melamine the same thing?



    Wondering the same. ;~) Maybe just for the flatness comparison.

    Yes, worded poorly. I use MDF with melamine on top for light-duty
    work surfaces. Keeps it nice and flat.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Leon@21:1/5 to All on Mon Sep 20 08:39:26 2021
    On 9/19/2021 11:13 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Sunday, September 19, 2021 at 10:05:52 AM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
    On 9/18/2021 2:03 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Saturday, September 18, 2021 at 12:31:02 PM UTC-4, k...@notreal.com wrote:
    On Sat, 18 Sep 2021 09:23:03 -0500, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
    wrote:
    On 9/17/2021 9:28 PM, k...@notreal.com wrote:
    On Fri, 17 Sep 2021 16:00:30 -0700 (PDT), "russell...@yahoo.com"
    <ritzann...@gmail.com> wrote:

    On Friday, September 17, 2021 at 1:50:39 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote:

    Since I am not painting, staining, or applying a finishing for any part
    of this job, the job should be fun.

    True!!!!!! I like the mechanical constructing part. Not the finishing part.

    Thoughts? Where do you find MDO?

    I get it in Houston at either Clark's Hardwood Lumber or Hardwood
    Products. At the moment Hardwood Products is out of stock and has no >>>>> idea when that will change. I suspect it may be available form any of >>>>> the local materials suppliers for the trades. A local lumber yard may >>>>> have it. The big box store "might" be able to order it for you.
    The BORG doesn't even recognize its existence and blue knows that it
    exists but will never stock it.

    Lowes carries 1/2 MDO. At least 50 sheets available locally.

    I bought some a few weeks ago. I really only needed sanded ply but
    the nice flat and slightly thicker MDO was a few bucks *cheaper* per
    sheet than the ugly twisted sanded ply.
    AND the surface likes any kind of paint. Some wood veneer plywoods tend
    to de laminate with some water based finishes. And that is the primary
    reason that I use MDO over wood veneer if I am going to paint.


    That's good to know. I used 3/4 Poplar veneered plywood for my last big project. It took the Benjamin Moore Advance primer and paint really well.
    I like that paint a lot, especially since I seriously hate to paint. It lays down
    nice and smooth.

    The ultra smooth surface of the MDO isn't a problem? What kind of primer & paint do you use?

    No Primer. So far I have painted all of my MDO pieces with General
    Finishes Milk Paint. The recently finished Murphy bed was painted with
    a Basil green milk paint.

    I did scuff the surface with 180 grit paper.

    When I was painting paint grade wood veneer I used a water based Sherwin Williams primer and saw the veneer de laminate almost immediately. I
    was able to get glue back under the veneer and all worked out OK. I
    topped with Sherwin Williams best oil based enamel. This was for my
    wife's sewing studio furniture.




    When I used the 1/2" MDO, I hid the surface. It was for that platform project in my Honda Odyssey, so it got covered with carpet. As I mentioned, I never would have considered using MDO, but it was cheaper than the sanded ply
    and flat, unlike the sanded ply.

    It was a good introduction to MDO, even though I didn't actually "finish" it. I will consider using it in the future.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Leon@21:1/5 to All on Mon Sep 20 08:32:11 2021
    On 9/19/2021 11:02 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Sunday, September 19, 2021 at 10:13:39 AM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
    On 9/18/2021 10:02 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Saturday, September 18, 2021 at 10:14:59 AM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
    On 9/17/2021 6:00 PM, russell...@yahoo.com wrote:
    On Friday, September 17, 2021 at 1:50:39 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote:

    Since I am not painting, staining, or applying a finishing for any part >>>>>> of this job, the job should be fun.

    True!!!!!! I like the mechanical constructing part. Not the finishing part.

    Finishing does not bother me so much except for the time it adds to
    complete a project. I almost always prefinish inside edges and closed
    in panels prior to glue up. 3 coats of a gel varnish. Then after the
    glue up 3 coats after sanding. That can easily add 2~8 days to the
    process depending on the humidity.

    And gel varnishes do not build quickly so they are thin. Not for
    children's furniture.

    Because this finish basically helps to prevent discoloration of the wood >>>> and that is about it I am considering switching to Rubio Monocoat
    finish. It too is a thin finish but it is 1 coat, fast dry, and applied >>>> with either a white Scotch Brite pad or poured on a tiny bit at a time >>>> and spread with a card scraper.
    Comes in about 40~50 shades including pure/natural. And it is pricey.
    But when time is money I think it is a wash.

    Apparently a scratch is easily repaired, sand, and reapply 1 coat. No
    lap marks.

    But who will repair the scratch 3 years after delivery? Are you the service >>> department also or will you hand the customer whatever finish is left over, >>> assuming there is some?

    Good question. But ask your self this question, with "ANY" other
    finish, who will repair the scratch 3 years after delivery?

    Depends on the terms of the warranty/protection plan. At this very
    moment I am looking at a brochure for the Platinum Protection Plan
    offered by the Raymour & Flanigan furniture chain. That's their 5
    year protection plan.

    The column for Wood and Other Hard Surface Furniture has a checkbox
    next to "Gouges or chips that penetrate the finish exposing the substrate." That box is checked.


    The customer can buy $10 sample bottles of the product and do the repair
    himself. With most any other finish that repair will be much more
    detailed, even with shellac.

    So, what I am hearing is that you aren't offering a 5 year Platinum Protection Plan. ;-)

    No, I do not. And FWIW I have bought my last furniture warranty
    protection plan. I have been stung for the last time.

    So our plan covered just about everything. Pets knawing on the wooden
    parts. And doing their thing on the leather, #1 and #2. I can throw up
    on the leather. Stab a hole in the leather.

    We later found out the hard way that sweat is not covered.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From DerbyDad03@21:1/5 to Leon on Mon Sep 20 12:05:18 2021
    On Monday, September 20, 2021 at 9:32:20 AM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
    On 9/19/2021 11:02 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Sunday, September 19, 2021 at 10:13:39 AM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
    On 9/18/2021 10:02 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Saturday, September 18, 2021 at 10:14:59 AM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
    On 9/17/2021 6:00 PM, russell...@yahoo.com wrote:
    On Friday, September 17, 2021 at 1:50:39 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote:

    Since I am not painting, staining, or applying a finishing for any part
    of this job, the job should be fun.

    True!!!!!! I like the mechanical constructing part. Not the finishing part.

    Finishing does not bother me so much except for the time it adds to
    complete a project. I almost always prefinish inside edges and closed >>>> in panels prior to glue up. 3 coats of a gel varnish. Then after the >>>> glue up 3 coats after sanding. That can easily add 2~8 days to the
    process depending on the humidity.

    And gel varnishes do not build quickly so they are thin. Not for
    children's furniture.

    Because this finish basically helps to prevent discoloration of the wood >>>> and that is about it I am considering switching to Rubio Monocoat
    finish. It too is a thin finish but it is 1 coat, fast dry, and applied >>>> with either a white Scotch Brite pad or poured on a tiny bit at a time >>>> and spread with a card scraper.
    Comes in about 40~50 shades including pure/natural. And it is pricey. >>>> But when time is money I think it is a wash.

    Apparently a scratch is easily repaired, sand, and reapply 1 coat. No >>>> lap marks.

    But who will repair the scratch 3 years after delivery? Are you the service
    department also or will you hand the customer whatever finish is left over,
    assuming there is some?

    Good question. But ask your self this question, with "ANY" other
    finish, who will repair the scratch 3 years after delivery?

    Depends on the terms of the warranty/protection plan. At this very
    moment I am looking at a brochure for the Platinum Protection Plan
    offered by the Raymour & Flanigan furniture chain. That's their 5
    year protection plan.

    The column for Wood and Other Hard Surface Furniture has a checkbox
    next to "Gouges or chips that penetrate the finish exposing the substrate." That box is checked.


    The customer can buy $10 sample bottles of the product and do the repair >> himself. With most any other finish that repair will be much more
    detailed, even with shellac.

    So, what I am hearing is that you aren't offering a 5 year Platinum Protection Plan. ;-)
    No, I do not. And FWIW I have bought my last furniture warranty
    protection plan. I have been stung for the last time.

    So our plan covered just about everything. Pets knawing on the wooden
    parts. And doing their thing on the leather, #1 and #2. I can throw up
    on the leather. Stab a hole in the leather.

    We later found out the hard way that sweat is not covered.

    You should have rented a cat to pee on your sweat stains before
    you put in the claim.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From DerbyDad03@21:1/5 to Leon on Mon Sep 20 12:08:08 2021
    On Monday, September 20, 2021 at 9:39:33 AM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
    On 9/19/2021 11:13 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Sunday, September 19, 2021 at 10:05:52 AM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
    On 9/18/2021 2:03 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Saturday, September 18, 2021 at 12:31:02 PM UTC-4, k...@notreal.com wrote:
    On Sat, 18 Sep 2021 09:23:03 -0500, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
    wrote:
    On 9/17/2021 9:28 PM, k...@notreal.com wrote:
    On Fri, 17 Sep 2021 16:00:30 -0700 (PDT), "russell...@yahoo.com" >>>>>> <ritzann...@gmail.com> wrote:

    On Friday, September 17, 2021 at 1:50:39 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote: >>>>>>>>
    Since I am not painting, staining, or applying a finishing for any part
    of this job, the job should be fun.

    True!!!!!! I like the mechanical constructing part. Not the finishing part.

    Thoughts? Where do you find MDO?

    I get it in Houston at either Clark's Hardwood Lumber or Hardwood
    Products. At the moment Hardwood Products is out of stock and has no >>>>> idea when that will change. I suspect it may be available form any of >>>>> the local materials suppliers for the trades. A local lumber yard may >>>>> have it. The big box store "might" be able to order it for you.
    The BORG doesn't even recognize its existence and blue knows that it >>>> exists but will never stock it.

    Lowes carries 1/2 MDO. At least 50 sheets available locally.

    I bought some a few weeks ago. I really only needed sanded ply but
    the nice flat and slightly thicker MDO was a few bucks *cheaper* per
    sheet than the ugly twisted sanded ply.
    AND the surface likes any kind of paint. Some wood veneer plywoods tend
    to de laminate with some water based finishes. And that is the primary
    reason that I use MDO over wood veneer if I am going to paint.


    That's good to know. I used 3/4 Poplar veneered plywood for my last big project. It took the Benjamin Moore Advance primer and paint really well.
    I like that paint a lot, especially since I seriously hate to paint. It lays down
    nice and smooth.

    The ultra smooth surface of the MDO isn't a problem? What kind of primer & paint do you use?
    No Primer. So far I have painted all of my MDO pieces with General
    Finishes Milk Paint. The recently finished Murphy bed was painted with
    a Basil green milk paint.

    Don't tell my wife. My next project is a bookcase for her.

    While I may consider milk paint, I hate green. ;-)

    I did scuff the surface with 180 grit paper.

    Good to know.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Leon@21:1/5 to All on Mon Sep 20 16:46:06 2021
    On 9/20/2021 2:08 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Monday, September 20, 2021 at 9:39:33 AM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
    On 9/19/2021 11:13 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Sunday, September 19, 2021 at 10:05:52 AM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
    On 9/18/2021 2:03 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Saturday, September 18, 2021 at 12:31:02 PM UTC-4, k...@notreal.com wrote:
    On Sat, 18 Sep 2021 09:23:03 -0500, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
    wrote:
    On 9/17/2021 9:28 PM, k...@notreal.com wrote:
    On Fri, 17 Sep 2021 16:00:30 -0700 (PDT), "russell...@yahoo.com" >>>>>>>> <ritzann...@gmail.com> wrote:

    On Friday, September 17, 2021 at 1:50:39 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote: >>>>>>>>>>
    Since I am not painting, staining, or applying a finishing for any part
    of this job, the job should be fun.

    True!!!!!! I like the mechanical constructing part. Not the finishing part.

    Thoughts? Where do you find MDO?

    I get it in Houston at either Clark's Hardwood Lumber or Hardwood >>>>>>> Products. At the moment Hardwood Products is out of stock and has no >>>>>>> idea when that will change. I suspect it may be available form any of >>>>>>> the local materials suppliers for the trades. A local lumber yard may >>>>>>> have it. The big box store "might" be able to order it for you.
    The BORG doesn't even recognize its existence and blue knows that it >>>>>> exists but will never stock it.

    Lowes carries 1/2 MDO. At least 50 sheets available locally.

    I bought some a few weeks ago. I really only needed sanded ply but
    the nice flat and slightly thicker MDO was a few bucks *cheaper* per >>>>> sheet than the ugly twisted sanded ply.
    AND the surface likes any kind of paint. Some wood veneer plywoods tend >>>> to de laminate with some water based finishes. And that is the primary >>>> reason that I use MDO over wood veneer if I am going to paint.


    That's good to know. I used 3/4 Poplar veneered plywood for my last big
    project. It took the Benjamin Moore Advance primer and paint really well. >>> I like that paint a lot, especially since I seriously hate to paint. It lays down
    nice and smooth.

    The ultra smooth surface of the MDO isn't a problem? What kind of primer & >>> paint do you use?
    No Primer. So far I have painted all of my MDO pieces with General
    Finishes Milk Paint. The recently finished Murphy bed was painted with
    a Basil green milk paint.

    Don't tell my wife. My next project is a bookcase for her.

    While I may consider milk paint, I hate green. ;-)

    But does she like green? My wife pocked the color. Don't second guess
    colors that your wife picks out. ;~)

    The milk paints come in a load of "country colors".



    I did scuff the surface with 180 grit paper.

    Good to know.




    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Leon@21:1/5 to All on Mon Sep 20 16:44:17 2021
    On 9/20/2021 2:05 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Monday, September 20, 2021 at 9:32:20 AM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
    On 9/19/2021 11:02 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Sunday, September 19, 2021 at 10:13:39 AM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
    On 9/18/2021 10:02 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Saturday, September 18, 2021 at 10:14:59 AM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
    On 9/17/2021 6:00 PM, russell...@yahoo.com wrote:
    On Friday, September 17, 2021 at 1:50:39 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote:

    Since I am not painting, staining, or applying a finishing for any part
    of this job, the job should be fun.

    True!!!!!! I like the mechanical constructing part. Not the finishing part.

    Finishing does not bother me so much except for the time it adds to >>>>>> complete a project. I almost always prefinish inside edges and closed >>>>>> in panels prior to glue up. 3 coats of a gel varnish. Then after the >>>>>> glue up 3 coats after sanding. That can easily add 2~8 days to the >>>>>> process depending on the humidity.

    And gel varnishes do not build quickly so they are thin. Not for
    children's furniture.

    Because this finish basically helps to prevent discoloration of the wood >>>>>> and that is about it I am considering switching to Rubio Monocoat
    finish. It too is a thin finish but it is 1 coat, fast dry, and applied >>>>>> with either a white Scotch Brite pad or poured on a tiny bit at a time >>>>>> and spread with a card scraper.
    Comes in about 40~50 shades including pure/natural. And it is pricey. >>>>>> But when time is money I think it is a wash.

    Apparently a scratch is easily repaired, sand, and reapply 1 coat. No >>>>>> lap marks.

    But who will repair the scratch 3 years after delivery? Are you the service
    department also or will you hand the customer whatever finish is left over,
    assuming there is some?

    Good question. But ask your self this question, with "ANY" other
    finish, who will repair the scratch 3 years after delivery?

    Depends on the terms of the warranty/protection plan. At this very
    moment I am looking at a brochure for the Platinum Protection Plan
    offered by the Raymour & Flanigan furniture chain. That's their 5
    year protection plan.

    The column for Wood and Other Hard Surface Furniture has a checkbox
    next to "Gouges or chips that penetrate the finish exposing the substrate." >>> That box is checked.


    The customer can buy $10 sample bottles of the product and do the repair >>>> himself. With most any other finish that repair will be much more
    detailed, even with shellac.

    So, what I am hearing is that you aren't offering a 5 year Platinum
    Protection Plan. ;-)
    No, I do not. And FWIW I have bought my last furniture warranty
    protection plan. I have been stung for the last time.

    So our plan covered just about everything. Pets knawing on the wooden
    parts. And doing their thing on the leather, #1 and #2. I can throw up
    on the leather. Stab a hole in the leather.

    We later found out the hard way that sweat is not covered.

    You should have rented a cat to pee on your sweat stains before
    you put in the claim.



    So I called for warranty coverage and answered 20 questions. What would
    you say caused the surface to discolor. Me, I don't know, maybe sweat.
    Is that what you want us to put down as the cause? Sure, its a bodily
    fluid, I don't really care what caused it.
    Is that your final answer? Yes,

    Pause, we are sorry but sweat is not covered.

    I bought the furniture at a prominent store in Houston and the brand was Flexsteel. Not Cheap.

    I read the manager the riot act and he took care of the problem.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From DerbyDad03@21:1/5 to Leon on Mon Sep 20 16:35:35 2021
    On Monday, September 20, 2021 at 5:44:24 PM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
    On 9/20/2021 2:05 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Monday, September 20, 2021 at 9:32:20 AM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
    On 9/19/2021 11:02 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Sunday, September 19, 2021 at 10:13:39 AM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
    On 9/18/2021 10:02 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Saturday, September 18, 2021 at 10:14:59 AM UTC-4, Leon wrote: >>>>>> On 9/17/2021 6:00 PM, russell...@yahoo.com wrote:
    On Friday, September 17, 2021 at 1:50:39 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote: >>>>>>>>
    Since I am not painting, staining, or applying a finishing for any part
    of this job, the job should be fun.

    True!!!!!! I like the mechanical constructing part. Not the finishing part.

    Finishing does not bother me so much except for the time it adds to >>>>>> complete a project. I almost always prefinish inside edges and closed >>>>>> in panels prior to glue up. 3 coats of a gel varnish. Then after the >>>>>> glue up 3 coats after sanding. That can easily add 2~8 days to the >>>>>> process depending on the humidity.

    And gel varnishes do not build quickly so they are thin. Not for >>>>>> children's furniture.

    Because this finish basically helps to prevent discoloration of the wood
    and that is about it I am considering switching to Rubio Monocoat >>>>>> finish. It too is a thin finish but it is 1 coat, fast dry, and applied
    with either a white Scotch Brite pad or poured on a tiny bit at a time >>>>>> and spread with a card scraper.
    Comes in about 40~50 shades including pure/natural. And it is pricey. >>>>>> But when time is money I think it is a wash.

    Apparently a scratch is easily repaired, sand, and reapply 1 coat. No >>>>>> lap marks.

    But who will repair the scratch 3 years after delivery? Are you the service
    department also or will you hand the customer whatever finish is left over,
    assuming there is some?

    Good question. But ask your self this question, with "ANY" other
    finish, who will repair the scratch 3 years after delivery?

    Depends on the terms of the warranty/protection plan. At this very
    moment I am looking at a brochure for the Platinum Protection Plan
    offered by the Raymour & Flanigan furniture chain. That's their 5
    year protection plan.

    The column for Wood and Other Hard Surface Furniture has a checkbox
    next to "Gouges or chips that penetrate the finish exposing the substrate."
    That box is checked.


    The customer can buy $10 sample bottles of the product and do the repair >>>> himself. With most any other finish that repair will be much more
    detailed, even with shellac.

    So, what I am hearing is that you aren't offering a 5 year Platinum
    Protection Plan. ;-)
    No, I do not. And FWIW I have bought my last furniture warranty
    protection plan. I have been stung for the last time.

    So our plan covered just about everything. Pets knawing on the wooden
    parts. And doing their thing on the leather, #1 and #2. I can throw up
    on the leather. Stab a hole in the leather.

    We later found out the hard way that sweat is not covered.

    You should have rented a cat to pee on your sweat stains before
    you put in the claim.

    So I called for warranty coverage and answered 20 questions. What would
    you say caused the surface to discolor. Me, I don't know, maybe sweat.
    Is that what you want us to put down as the cause? Sure, its a bodily
    fluid, I don't really care what caused it.
    Is that your final answer? Yes,

    Pause, we are sorry but sweat is not covered.

    I bought the furniture at a prominent store in Houston and the brand was Flexsteel. Not Cheap.

    I read the manager the riot act and he took care of the problem.

    I'm in the middle of similar issue right now, although mine is related to
    an issue with the condition of my *not cheap* sectional upon arrival.
    The one I waited 2 months to have delivered. (It's Covid, you know)

    2 piece sectional, therefore 8 wooden legs. 5 of the 8 legs looked like
    this at delivery:

    https://i.imgur.com/UYYen3R.jpg

    https://i.imgur.com/QDKQLHi.jpg

    The repair guys shows up and based on the single picture that the delivery
    guy uploaded, the repair guy thought I had one minor scratch and thought
    he could take it out to the truck and throw some stain on it. "That ain't happening, I want all new legs."

    It's now 8 weeks later. They apparently lost the order for my legs and don't expect to see the second order for *at least* 6 more weeks. I told the rep
    that I could make a set of legs in one afternoon and be done with this fiasco.

    "I'm sorry sir. We're sending you a $250 gift card for your trouble."

    Great. Thanks. I probably can't even get a lamp at that store for $250.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From krw@notreal.com@21:1/5 to All on Mon Sep 20 20:22:58 2021
    On Mon, 20 Sep 2021 16:46:06 -0500, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
    wrote:

    On 9/20/2021 2:08 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Monday, September 20, 2021 at 9:39:33 AM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
    On 9/19/2021 11:13 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Sunday, September 19, 2021 at 10:05:52 AM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
    On 9/18/2021 2:03 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Saturday, September 18, 2021 at 12:31:02 PM UTC-4, k...@notreal.com wrote:
    On Sat, 18 Sep 2021 09:23:03 -0500, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet> >>>>>>> wrote:
    On 9/17/2021 9:28 PM, k...@notreal.com wrote:
    On Fri, 17 Sep 2021 16:00:30 -0700 (PDT), "russell...@yahoo.com" >>>>>>>>> <ritzann...@gmail.com> wrote:

    On Friday, September 17, 2021 at 1:50:39 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote: >>>>>>>>>>>
    Since I am not painting, staining, or applying a finishing for any part
    of this job, the job should be fun.

    True!!!!!! I like the mechanical constructing part. Not the finishing part.

    Thoughts? Where do you find MDO?

    I get it in Houston at either Clark's Hardwood Lumber or Hardwood >>>>>>>> Products. At the moment Hardwood Products is out of stock and has no >>>>>>>> idea when that will change. I suspect it may be available form any of >>>>>>>> the local materials suppliers for the trades. A local lumber yard may >>>>>>>> have it. The big box store "might" be able to order it for you. >>>>>>> The BORG doesn't even recognize its existence and blue knows that it >>>>>>> exists but will never stock it.

    Lowes carries 1/2 MDO. At least 50 sheets available locally.

    I bought some a few weeks ago. I really only needed sanded ply but >>>>>> the nice flat and slightly thicker MDO was a few bucks *cheaper* per >>>>>> sheet than the ugly twisted sanded ply.
    AND the surface likes any kind of paint. Some wood veneer plywoods tend >>>>> to de laminate with some water based finishes. And that is the primary >>>>> reason that I use MDO over wood veneer if I am going to paint.


    That's good to know. I used 3/4 Poplar veneered plywood for my last big >>>> project. It took the Benjamin Moore Advance primer and paint really well. >>>> I like that paint a lot, especially since I seriously hate to paint. It lays down
    nice and smooth.

    The ultra smooth surface of the MDO isn't a problem? What kind of primer & >>>> paint do you use?
    No Primer. So far I have painted all of my MDO pieces with General
    Finishes Milk Paint. The recently finished Murphy bed was painted with
    a Basil green milk paint.

    Don't tell my wife. My next project is a bookcase for her.

    While I may consider milk paint, I hate green. ;-)

    But does she like green? My wife pocked the color. Don't second guess >colors that your wife picks out. ;~)

    I once had that plan, until it didn't work. She picked the paint for
    our family room. She was out of the house paint day. I opened the
    can and thought ("Pepto Bismol"). Well... She didn't much like it
    either.

    The milk paints come in a load of "country colors".

    Not my favorites. Not enough saturation for my taste.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Leon@21:1/5 to All on Tue Sep 21 08:15:13 2021
    On 9/20/2021 6:35 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Monday, September 20, 2021 at 5:44:24 PM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
    On 9/20/2021 2:05 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Monday, September 20, 2021 at 9:32:20 AM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
    On 9/19/2021 11:02 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Sunday, September 19, 2021 at 10:13:39 AM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
    On 9/18/2021 10:02 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Saturday, September 18, 2021 at 10:14:59 AM UTC-4, Leon wrote: >>>>>>>> On 9/17/2021 6:00 PM, russell...@yahoo.com wrote:
    On Friday, September 17, 2021 at 1:50:39 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote: >>>>>>>>>>
    Since I am not painting, staining, or applying a finishing for any part
    of this job, the job should be fun.

    True!!!!!! I like the mechanical constructing part. Not the finishing part.

    Finishing does not bother me so much except for the time it adds to >>>>>>>> complete a project. I almost always prefinish inside edges and closed >>>>>>>> in panels prior to glue up. 3 coats of a gel varnish. Then after the >>>>>>>> glue up 3 coats after sanding. That can easily add 2~8 days to the >>>>>>>> process depending on the humidity.

    And gel varnishes do not build quickly so they are thin. Not for >>>>>>>> children's furniture.

    Because this finish basically helps to prevent discoloration of the wood
    and that is about it I am considering switching to Rubio Monocoat >>>>>>>> finish. It too is a thin finish but it is 1 coat, fast dry, and applied
    with either a white Scotch Brite pad or poured on a tiny bit at a time >>>>>>>> and spread with a card scraper.
    Comes in about 40~50 shades including pure/natural. And it is pricey. >>>>>>>> But when time is money I think it is a wash.

    Apparently a scratch is easily repaired, sand, and reapply 1 coat. No >>>>>>>> lap marks.

    But who will repair the scratch 3 years after delivery? Are you the service
    department also or will you hand the customer whatever finish is left over,
    assuming there is some?

    Good question. But ask your self this question, with "ANY" other
    finish, who will repair the scratch 3 years after delivery?

    Depends on the terms of the warranty/protection plan. At this very
    moment I am looking at a brochure for the Platinum Protection Plan
    offered by the Raymour & Flanigan furniture chain. That's their 5
    year protection plan.

    The column for Wood and Other Hard Surface Furniture has a checkbox
    next to "Gouges or chips that penetrate the finish exposing the substrate."
    That box is checked.


    The customer can buy $10 sample bottles of the product and do the repair >>>>>> himself. With most any other finish that repair will be much more
    detailed, even with shellac.

    So, what I am hearing is that you aren't offering a 5 year Platinum
    Protection Plan. ;-)
    No, I do not. And FWIW I have bought my last furniture warranty
    protection plan. I have been stung for the last time.

    So our plan covered just about everything. Pets knawing on the wooden
    parts. And doing their thing on the leather, #1 and #2. I can throw up >>>> on the leather. Stab a hole in the leather.

    We later found out the hard way that sweat is not covered.

    You should have rented a cat to pee on your sweat stains before
    you put in the claim.

    So I called for warranty coverage and answered 20 questions. What would
    you say caused the surface to discolor. Me, I don't know, maybe sweat.
    Is that what you want us to put down as the cause? Sure, its a bodily
    fluid, I don't really care what caused it.
    Is that your final answer? Yes,

    Pause, we are sorry but sweat is not covered.

    I bought the furniture at a prominent store in Houston and the brand was
    Flexsteel. Not Cheap.

    I read the manager the riot act and he took care of the problem.

    I'm in the middle of similar issue right now, although mine is related to
    an issue with the condition of my *not cheap* sectional upon arrival.
    The one I waited 2 months to have delivered. (It's Covid, you know)

    We waited 4 months and it was about 8 years ago.



    2 piece sectional, therefore 8 wooden legs. 5 of the 8 legs looked like
    this at delivery:

    https://i.imgur.com/UYYen3R.jpg

    https://i.imgur.com/QDKQLHi.jpg

    The repair guys shows up and based on the single picture that the delivery guy uploaded, the repair guy thought I had one minor scratch and thought
    he could take it out to the truck and throw some stain on it. "That ain't happening, I want all new legs."

    It's now 8 weeks later. They apparently lost the order for my legs and don't expect to see the second order for *at least* 6 more weeks. I told the rep that I could make a set of legs in one afternoon and be done with this fiasco.

    "I'm sorry sir. We're sending you a $250 gift card for your trouble."

    Great. Thanks. I probably can't even get a lamp at that store for $250.


    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Leon@21:1/5 to krw@notreal.com on Tue Sep 21 08:17:46 2021
    On 9/20/2021 7:22 PM, krw@notreal.com wrote:
    On Mon, 20 Sep 2021 16:46:06 -0500, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
    wrote:

    On 9/20/2021 2:08 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Monday, September 20, 2021 at 9:39:33 AM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
    On 9/19/2021 11:13 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Sunday, September 19, 2021 at 10:05:52 AM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
    On 9/18/2021 2:03 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Saturday, September 18, 2021 at 12:31:02 PM UTC-4, k...@notreal.com wrote:
    On Sat, 18 Sep 2021 09:23:03 -0500, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet> >>>>>>>> wrote:
    On 9/17/2021 9:28 PM, k...@notreal.com wrote:
    On Fri, 17 Sep 2021 16:00:30 -0700 (PDT), "russell...@yahoo.com" >>>>>>>>>> <ritzann...@gmail.com> wrote:

    On Friday, September 17, 2021 at 1:50:39 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote: >>>>>>>>>>>>
    Since I am not painting, staining, or applying a finishing for any part
    of this job, the job should be fun.

    True!!!!!! I like the mechanical constructing part. Not the finishing part.

    Thoughts? Where do you find MDO?

    I get it in Houston at either Clark's Hardwood Lumber or Hardwood >>>>>>>>> Products. At the moment Hardwood Products is out of stock and has no >>>>>>>>> idea when that will change. I suspect it may be available form any of >>>>>>>>> the local materials suppliers for the trades. A local lumber yard may >>>>>>>>> have it. The big box store "might" be able to order it for you. >>>>>>>> The BORG doesn't even recognize its existence and blue knows that it >>>>>>>> exists but will never stock it.

    Lowes carries 1/2 MDO. At least 50 sheets available locally.

    I bought some a few weeks ago. I really only needed sanded ply but >>>>>>> the nice flat and slightly thicker MDO was a few bucks *cheaper* per >>>>>>> sheet than the ugly twisted sanded ply.
    AND the surface likes any kind of paint. Some wood veneer plywoods tend >>>>>> to de laminate with some water based finishes. And that is the primary >>>>>> reason that I use MDO over wood veneer if I am going to paint.


    That's good to know. I used 3/4 Poplar veneered plywood for my last big >>>>> project. It took the Benjamin Moore Advance primer and paint really well. >>>>> I like that paint a lot, especially since I seriously hate to paint. It lays down
    nice and smooth.

    The ultra smooth surface of the MDO isn't a problem? What kind of primer &
    paint do you use?
    No Primer. So far I have painted all of my MDO pieces with General
    Finishes Milk Paint. The recently finished Murphy bed was painted with >>>> a Basil green milk paint.

    Don't tell my wife. My next project is a bookcase for her.

    While I may consider milk paint, I hate green. ;-)

    But does she like green? My wife pocked the color. Don't second guess
    colors that your wife picks out. ;~)

    I once had that plan, until it didn't work. She picked the paint for
    our family room. She was out of the house paint day. I opened the
    can and thought ("Pepto Bismol"). Well... She didn't much like it
    either.

    The milk paints come in a load of "country colors".

    Not my favorites. Not enough saturation for my taste.



    Define Saturation. General Finishes milk paints are heavy bodied and
    quite opaque. One coat is almost enough over most any color.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From krw@notreal.com@21:1/5 to All on Tue Sep 21 20:33:34 2021
    On Tue, 21 Sep 2021 08:17:46 -0500, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
    wrote:

    On 9/20/2021 7:22 PM, krw@notreal.com wrote:
    On Mon, 20 Sep 2021 16:46:06 -0500, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
    wrote:

    On 9/20/2021 2:08 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Monday, September 20, 2021 at 9:39:33 AM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
    On 9/19/2021 11:13 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Sunday, September 19, 2021 at 10:05:52 AM UTC-4, Leon wrote:
    On 9/18/2021 2:03 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Saturday, September 18, 2021 at 12:31:02 PM UTC-4, k...@notreal.com wrote:
    On Sat, 18 Sep 2021 09:23:03 -0500, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet> >>>>>>>>> wrote:
    On 9/17/2021 9:28 PM, k...@notreal.com wrote:
    On Fri, 17 Sep 2021 16:00:30 -0700 (PDT), "russell...@yahoo.com" >>>>>>>>>>> <ritzann...@gmail.com> wrote:

    On Friday, September 17, 2021 at 1:50:39 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote: >>>>>>>>>>>>>
    Since I am not painting, staining, or applying a finishing for any part
    of this job, the job should be fun.

    True!!!!!! I like the mechanical constructing part. Not the finishing part.

    Thoughts? Where do you find MDO?

    I get it in Houston at either Clark's Hardwood Lumber or Hardwood >>>>>>>>>> Products. At the moment Hardwood Products is out of stock and has no >>>>>>>>>> idea when that will change. I suspect it may be available form any of
    the local materials suppliers for the trades. A local lumber yard may
    have it. The big box store "might" be able to order it for you. >>>>>>>>> The BORG doesn't even recognize its existence and blue knows that it >>>>>>>>> exists but will never stock it.

    Lowes carries 1/2 MDO. At least 50 sheets available locally.

    I bought some a few weeks ago. I really only needed sanded ply but >>>>>>>> the nice flat and slightly thicker MDO was a few bucks *cheaper* per >>>>>>>> sheet than the ugly twisted sanded ply.
    AND the surface likes any kind of paint. Some wood veneer plywoods tend >>>>>>> to de laminate with some water based finishes. And that is the primary >>>>>>> reason that I use MDO over wood veneer if I am going to paint.


    That's good to know. I used 3/4 Poplar veneered plywood for my last big >>>>>> project. It took the Benjamin Moore Advance primer and paint really well.
    I like that paint a lot, especially since I seriously hate to paint. It lays down
    nice and smooth.

    The ultra smooth surface of the MDO isn't a problem? What kind of primer &
    paint do you use?
    No Primer. So far I have painted all of my MDO pieces with General
    Finishes Milk Paint. The recently finished Murphy bed was painted with >>>>> a Basil green milk paint.

    Don't tell my wife. My next project is a bookcase for her.

    While I may consider milk paint, I hate green. ;-)

    But does she like green? My wife pocked the color. Don't second guess
    colors that your wife picks out. ;~)

    I once had that plan, until it didn't work. She picked the paint for
    our family room. She was out of the house paint day. I opened the
    can and thought ("Pepto Bismol"). Well... She didn't much like it
    either.

    The milk paints come in a load of "country colors".

    Not my favorites. Not enough saturation for my taste.



    Define Saturation. General Finishes milk paints are heavy bodied and
    quite opaque. One coat is almost enough over most any color.

    Color intensity. The 'S' in the HSV visual system. Milk paint colors
    are more washed out than I prefer. Intense red is the best paint for
    cherry. ;-)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)