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baked on finish
Gerald Boggs -
Tuesday, November 25, 2008 - 8:21am
Blacksmithing I just learned this from a friend. He was working with a smith out east of me on a large handrail job. To finish it, they contacted the Powdercoat company about using their ovens on the weekend. As the powdercoaters are closed on the weekend, they agreed to rent the use. So what he did was to take all his railings there, coat them with boiled linseed oil and bake them at 400 for about hour and half. I didn't get to see this, but I understand the finish came out beautifully. Which got me thinking of other ways besides the propane torch to heat my iron before applying the finish. I've a table I needed to finish and I wasn't looking forward to using all the torch fuel to heat it up before applying the linseed oil/wax finish. The light bulb flickered on and into my basement I went. I heat with rather large wood stove. So I put it on top of the wood stove and left it for a few hours. After it was nice and hot, plus well dried out, I heated up the finish and painted it on. With the iron hot and the finish melted, it was quite easy to get into every crook and cranny. Took it off the stove and made sure all was covered. Today, I'll apply the straight wax coat and it'll be finished. That was a lot easier then heating it with torch. So I got thinking, I could do the same with a Salamander heater. It's starting to get cold in the shop and I could kill two birds with one stone, heat the shop and have a easy way to heat the iron for the finish. Reply |
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