#11
Wandered into a Wooden Boat Forum and found them discussing adding walnut shells or rubber bits to make decks less slippery. Any experience with these?
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#12
If you're talking about workbenches, some craftsmen work the surface with toothing planes. I don't have a wooden bench top, but Masonite, so it doesn't matter to me.
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#13
Sorry. I don't know how I read that wrong.
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#14
Out here, the commercial sportfishing boats just throw sand in the wet deck paint. Not what I would want on a bench top.
Thanks,  Curt
-----------------
"Life can only be understood backwards; but it must be lived forwards."
      -- Soren Kierkegaard
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#15
There are nonslip marine finishes. Jamestown distributers has a number of different products like http://www.jamestowndistributors.com/use...-Skid+Additive. Whether or not they will do whatever it is that you want I can't say ; but it seems unlikely.
homo homini lupus
"The best lack all conviction, while the worst are full of passionate intensity." Yeats
Si vis pacem, para bellum
Quodcumque potest manus tua facere instaner opere Ecclesiastes
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#16
Instead of searching for a non-skid finish, consider using shelf lining material which is thin neopream/rubber and perforated. My wife bought a roll, not sure where, and one day I used a piece to stabilize a panel I was sanding. Works like a champ and ---- when I'm done, I roll it up and put it away until next time.
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Nonslip Finish on Maple Bench top


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