06-23-2016, 07:10 PM
I recently switched to GF EV as a finish for the furniture I make for our home. I got tired of the long dry times of GF oil polyureathane and thought I could spray the GF with my Rockler turbine spray gun. Yeah, not so much. Either I suck, the gun sucks, or both. So when it came time for the top of the cabinet I just finished, I did this.
Remembering Flexner talking about wipe-on finish (just slather it on, don't worry about consistency or missed spots) and using the foam brush like an airplane coming in for landing or taking off as you place or lift the brush, I put 5 coats of the GF EV basically as fast as I could on the 92x30 top of the cabinet. Went fast and furious to keep as wet an edge as possible, there were some brush marks where sections overlapped, but I just kept at it. Lightly sanded with 320 between coats.
After 5 coats it looked pretty...eh. A few dust nibs (nowhere near oil based poly thought), some brush marks, some overlaps...not a great finish and about what you'd expect with as fast as possible. Cool thing is those 5 coats took 1 day, not 5 like oil. I loved that.
I let it sit for a week.
Then the fun part. I purchased a set of micro-mesh 6" with holes sanding discs directly from the Micro-Surface website. Sanded with Abralon through 600 grit on the orbital sander, then went through the MM grits. Mist the surface with water while sanding, wiped down with my hand and then a blue rag with DNA after sanding.
Around the 3600 grit I was wondering what the hell I was doing because it was super satin (it was white opaque...). Power through and hope it turns out okay.
Well, by the time I was done, took about an hour or so, the top surface feels and looks like glass. My wife loves it more than any other finish I've done. There are a couple spots where it's still a little dull, maybe some polishing compound (I ordered 3M Finesse It for next time, something Jeff Jewitt recommends on the GF site), but all in all, it turned out real nice.
So, even though it turned out great imo, what did I do wrong? If anyone has a try this or try that to make it even easier or better, I'm all ears.
But I thought I'd share because I found something that for me is the easiest finish quality:work ratio I've ever done. Don't know that I'd do it for the rest of the casework of the cabinet, but for the show, the top, I like it alot.
-Shane
Remembering Flexner talking about wipe-on finish (just slather it on, don't worry about consistency or missed spots) and using the foam brush like an airplane coming in for landing or taking off as you place or lift the brush, I put 5 coats of the GF EV basically as fast as I could on the 92x30 top of the cabinet. Went fast and furious to keep as wet an edge as possible, there were some brush marks where sections overlapped, but I just kept at it. Lightly sanded with 320 between coats.
After 5 coats it looked pretty...eh. A few dust nibs (nowhere near oil based poly thought), some brush marks, some overlaps...not a great finish and about what you'd expect with as fast as possible. Cool thing is those 5 coats took 1 day, not 5 like oil. I loved that.
I let it sit for a week.
Then the fun part. I purchased a set of micro-mesh 6" with holes sanding discs directly from the Micro-Surface website. Sanded with Abralon through 600 grit on the orbital sander, then went through the MM grits. Mist the surface with water while sanding, wiped down with my hand and then a blue rag with DNA after sanding.
Around the 3600 grit I was wondering what the hell I was doing because it was super satin (it was white opaque...). Power through and hope it turns out okay.
Well, by the time I was done, took about an hour or so, the top surface feels and looks like glass. My wife loves it more than any other finish I've done. There are a couple spots where it's still a little dull, maybe some polishing compound (I ordered 3M Finesse It for next time, something Jeff Jewitt recommends on the GF site), but all in all, it turned out real nice.
So, even though it turned out great imo, what did I do wrong? If anyone has a try this or try that to make it even easier or better, I'm all ears.
But I thought I'd share because I found something that for me is the easiest finish quality:work ratio I've ever done. Don't know that I'd do it for the rest of the casework of the cabinet, but for the show, the top, I like it alot.
-Shane