07-17-2016, 12:58 PM
I'm building a crib for my next grandkid. Typical combination of solid oak wood, oak plywood and slats. There are so many slats I decided to spray a quick-drying oil polyurethane. I'm not an expert sprayer, only done a couple of small pieces. I'm outside at around 80-85. In the shade on a calm day. When I started I had the feed set too high and it started to run. Wiped off, backed off and went on.
3 coats later looks good. No runs. No sanding between coats. The solid wood and the slats are sort of OK. Rougher then I want. The plywood feels like sand paper. 400 grit knocks it down without visible scratches. I thought it was dust but the 2 surfaces are so different.
I have 2 more pieces to do and I want to avoid this problem. What can I do? Am I spraying with not enough varnish? I can't figure out why the plywood is so very rough. Ideas?
3 coats later looks good. No runs. No sanding between coats. The solid wood and the slats are sort of OK. Rougher then I want. The plywood feels like sand paper. 400 grit knocks it down without visible scratches. I thought it was dust but the 2 surfaces are so different.
I have 2 more pieces to do and I want to avoid this problem. What can I do? Am I spraying with not enough varnish? I can't figure out why the plywood is so very rough. Ideas?
Was living the good retired life on the Lake. Now just living retired.