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Thread: What Gloss Varnish to Use?

  1. #1
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    What Gloss Varnish to Use?

    Hi all

    I've just bought a timber finish glovebox strip for my D2. It has a few very light scratches and before fitting I was going to give a coat of clear varnish to lift it a bit.

    The question is what should I use? I was thinking of either a clear outdoor gloss varnish or the COB clearcoat that goes over most exterior colours today.

    Yes/no or any other suggestions greatly appreciated!

    Cheers

    Steve

  2. #2
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    You may have to sand it back before coating it as its original coating may "fry" with a diss-similar product.Unless you can get a hold of the factory spec varnish.
    Once its bare any good UV stabalised coating should work.
    Andrew
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    Might be worth trying a small can of "clear coat lacquer" and giving it 3 - 4 coats.

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    Hi Andrew

    Good idea! I was just going to give it a light buff with some steel wool, but sanding makes good sense.

    Cheers

    Steve

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    varnish

    I only use Feast Watson marine varnish on my boat.
    I would stear clear of 2 pac epoxy because it has very poor UV properties.

  6. #6
    Roverlord off road spares is offline AT REST
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    You could try a clear 2 pack rod building epoxy . It is used over the thread binding on fishing rods to seal and protect the bindings.It dries rock hard as a smooth finish and it good for UV, ( Fishing rods are exposed to UV all the time when in use.) I used to build custom fishing rods and those epoxy coatings were the ants pants
    it never yellowed or caused discolouration on binding threads
    Applying gentle heat will get rid of bubbles in the finish
    [ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=07kQdHdTaKY]Step 9: Epoxy Finish- Rod Building Made Easy - YouTube[/ame]


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    Quote Originally Posted by jerryd View Post
    Might be worth trying a small can of "clear coat lacquer" and giving it 3 - 4 coats.
    x2

    I've used automotive clear coat lacquer on everything, if your worried test it first on a small area.

    woody

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    Before you sand it, is it really wood or is it plastic?
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  9. #9
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    A very good point Ron which I have just discovered.

    Looking at it closely i thought it was a very thin wood veneer moulded to the plastic base but it is really faux wood. I discovered this when giving it a light sand this morning and accidently sanded thru the plastic print on one corner. A dab with some dark cedar timber stain has fixed the problem nicely though.

    I didn't realise Landrover were getting this cheap. Still it looks a lot better than some of the Japanese faux wood.

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    One way to tell if the coat that is on it is water based or oil based: Use a bit of 'Metho' and rub a smal out of the way area, like the side, or back. If water based it will haze over. i.e. eat into the finish. If oil based, no affect. You cant put oil based over water based, or vise a versa. Iit will not stick, even if sanded back, as the finish soaks into the wood (if it is wood). Stick with what is on it.

    Ken

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