Posts: 24,145
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Joined: Sep 2003
Location: Missouri
Biult a couple for a customer about 15 years ago.
3 coats of water based poly.
Saw the top again about 3 years ago. They were looking a little rough.
Steve
Mo.
I miss the days of using my dinghy with a girlfriend too. Zack Butler-4/18/24
The Revos apparently are designed to clamp railroad ties and pull together horrifically prepared joints
WaterlooMark 02/9/2020
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Location: Front seat on the Struggle Bus
Have a live edge double sink top in the shop now....the owner plans on using the pour on bar top finish.
Ed
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Joined: Sep 2005
Many years ago I refinished the table tops for the local Starbucks using four coats of oil based poly. I waited 10 days after the final coat to return them to the store to allow a good cure.
Starbucks remodels every store on a 10 year cycle. The refinished table tops looked good when they were retired after about 8 to 9 years of commercial service.
Based on that result I have been a fan of oil based poly for table tops. But a good cure is needed before bringing into service.
No animals were injured or killed in the production of this post.
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Joined: Dec 2009
Location: Grand Rapids, Minnesota
I've made about a dozen vanity tops (laminated pine or white cedar) and used bar top resin on all of them.
I first sealed them with equal coats of oil based poly top and bottom and then resin.
Oldest tops are 18-19 years old with no issues.
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Joined: Jan 2007
Location: Warrenton, MO
I built a vanity top out of edge glued pine. Three coats of spar varnish. Looked great till somebody dropped a can of shaving cream and left a half moon indentation. Anyway, I should have used epoxy cause it would have been harder.
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Was living the good retired life on the Lake. Now just living retired.
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I built a wood vanity many moons ago with a drop in sink. It lasted for years, until we finally renovated/overhauled the bathroom. I had several coats of gloss PU finished with a coat of satin. Gloss has more solids, but I did not want the shinyness...learned that trick from a floor refinisher...
I agree that nicks, scratches and other beauty marks provide character/patina...
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Joined: Jan 2015
Wow!
Thank you for all the very helpful responses!! Knowing the people who will use it, I am more concerned about standing water than the thickness of the coat, so I think I will go with epoxy. I've never used it, but it can't be that hard to do.
To do is to be (Camus)
To be is to do (Sartre)
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