Labor Intensive Mistake, how to reduce the labor?
Posted: Oct 19th, '06, 15:47
Hi All,
I built a custom center console for my Bertram 25 out of mahogany and then finished it with 4 coats of standard west systems epoxy and then 7 coats of interlux varnish with the extra UV inhibitors. After 4 months or so I'm getting random patches where the epoxy is yellowing below the varnish and I'm not happy about having to redo the work because of the labor involved.
My plan was to seal all the wood with Epoxy and then provide protection for the epoxy with several layers of varnish. When I did the finishing work I made sure that I did it all indoors in a room where I kept the shades down so I did not yellow the epoxy before I got several coats of varnish on it. So I did take steps to avoid the yellowing.
So at this point am I screwed? sand everything off and then start from scratch. I got the finish pretty good the first time (not Capt Pat level, but I can see my reflection clearly) and I spent an enormous amount of time doing it. Are there ways to cheat?
advice?
I built a custom center console for my Bertram 25 out of mahogany and then finished it with 4 coats of standard west systems epoxy and then 7 coats of interlux varnish with the extra UV inhibitors. After 4 months or so I'm getting random patches where the epoxy is yellowing below the varnish and I'm not happy about having to redo the work because of the labor involved.
My plan was to seal all the wood with Epoxy and then provide protection for the epoxy with several layers of varnish. When I did the finishing work I made sure that I did it all indoors in a room where I kept the shades down so I did not yellow the epoxy before I got several coats of varnish on it. So I did take steps to avoid the yellowing.
So at this point am I screwed? sand everything off and then start from scratch. I got the finish pretty good the first time (not Capt Pat level, but I can see my reflection clearly) and I spent an enormous amount of time doing it. Are there ways to cheat?
advice?