A couple of useful tips - Printable Version +- Woodnet Forums (https://forums.woodnet.net) +-- Thread: A couple of useful tips (/showthread.php?tid=7327765) Pages:
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RE: A couple of useful tips - jteneyck - 02-11-2017 (02-10-2017, 09:30 AM)mdhills Wrote: Does microwave on low work to soften wax? I didn't try to heat the wax directly in the microwave; I'm not sure that would be a good idea but that's just a guess. I put it in a cup with water and let the water heat up. Maybe some of the energy went into the wax directly; no clue. After 10 minutes or so it was pretty pliable and I could easily scoop out dabs of it with a screw driver and putty the holes. It stayed soft enough to continue doing that for at least 5 minutes. I did the entire side of the arched doors before it got a little too hard to easily use. But I had another chunk in the water ready to go, so I just grabbed it and continued with the other side of the doors. John RE: A couple of useful tips - jteneyck - 02-11-2017 I have one of those mason's bags, Steve, not as nice as the one you showed, however. I just find the thing very messy to use, probably because I've never practiced with it. The caulking tube idea just seemed a lot easier and less messy for me. But if I were faced with doing miles of similar gaps I could justify whatever learning would be needed to learn how to load and use the bag without making a mess of it. John RE: A couple of useful tips - Steve N - 02-11-2017 John that isn't a Mason bag, they are too rough, and crudely made, that is one for decorating cakes. I imagine at the time I got mine it was high end, but I got it at an auction for 50 cents IIRC. RE: A couple of useful tips - jteneyck - 02-11-2017 (02-11-2017, 04:19 PM)Steve N Wrote: John that isn't a Mason bag, they are too rough, and crudely made, that is one for decorating cakes. Makes sense; my mason's bag is a pretty crude affair as you said. So, another way to skin the cat - or fill the crack. My 5 cats are all looking at me suspiciously now. John RE: A couple of useful tips - blackhat - 02-13-2017 For somewhere in the neighbourhood of $15, you can buy a jerky gun. Check them out. RE: A couple of useful tips - Steve N - 02-16-2017 (02-13-2017, 12:11 AM)blackhat Wrote: For somewhere in the neighbourhood of $15, you can buy a jerky gun. Check them out. I think versus the cost of a new, very nice cake decorating bag in todays $$$$$ I'd be getting a Jerky gun if I was starting out again Thankfully I don't do enough drywall work anymore to worry much about it |