Butternut and cherry table

Phil.H

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Wife said she was going to buy a table for her house plant. I said no way!
I made a 24 high by 14 round butternut and cherry one. (pulled an all nighter to get it done before leaving on vacation.)
IMG_2869.jpg
Some along the way pics are posted in the what did you do in the shop today thread.
 

Nature Man

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Wife said she was going to buy a table for her house plant. I said no way!
I made a 24 high by 14 round butternut and cherry one. (pulled an all nighter to get it done before leaving on vacation.)
View attachment 279586
Some along the way pics are posted in the what did you do in the shop today thread.
Congrats! Crazy fast build! You are a machine! Enjoy your vacation! Chuck
 

Nubsnstubs

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Wife said she was going to buy a table for her house plant
That statement has more detail in it than the first one you made and shows you paid attention. That is a very good looking table. How did you do the feet? .......... Nubs
 

trc65

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Cool looking table! Make sure you get lots of finish on that top. No matter how careful one is, water drops will land on it and sit until they dry.
 

trc65

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3 thick coats of wood 757 applied. Should work ok for minor spills.
Had to look that one up. Definitely sufficient for almost any spill.

That's a UV cure correct? Do you use lights or just set it in the sun?
 

JonathanH

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FYI.
UV-cured coatings tend to be somewhat porous and usually allow some moisture migration.

Would love to know how this holds up for you over time with updates.
 

trc65

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FYI.
UV-cured coatings tend to be somewhat porous and usually allow some moisture migration.

Would love to know how this holds up for you over time with updates.
I'm curious why. Not a chemist at all, but could you expand on this in layman's terms?
 

JonathanH

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I'm curious why. Not a chemist at all, but could you expand on this in layman's terms?

I'm not a chemist either but have worked with UV-cured inks & coatings in the print industry for more than 2 decades. The first 15 years was testing on plastic substrates in outdoor applications. Think about horticultural tags or gas pump signage. Environments where ordinary inks & coatings fail in short order. A xenon arc + water spray test chamber is used to run an ASTM test for repeatable test results at an expedited time frame and the length of time in the field can be correlated to the amount of test time prior to adhesion failure.

Standard inks & coatings fail in a very short time period mostly due to the porosity of the UV-cured coating. It allows a tiny amount of water to penetrate and rest on the surface of the substrate. The difference in shrinkage rates of the heat / cool cycles between the inks / coatings and the substrate eventually defeat the adhesion to the substrate.

Inks with UV-cured coatings fail in the test chamber 100% of the time long before a control piece next to it with every other variable the same but minus the UV Coating fails.

There are a couple of ways to gain extended life in this scenario. Different resins / monomers can be used that are resistant to water. This helps tremendously but adds cost. The other way is to use an application method that introduces minimum air entrainment to the coating prior to cure.

The last 8 years my job has been in R&D as a Product Manager for a company that makes only UV-cured inks & coatings for the print industry currently working very closely with 3 professional UV chemists on the team. This topic comes up several times per year with large customers.

I'm positive that there is very little difference in the coatings that we make & sell into the print industry vs the new coatings available for wood finishing and have often thought about doing a little experimenting.

I hope that this makes sense. And I am serious about wanting an update on how this is holding up after a few months of usage as a plant holder.

@trc65
@Phil.H
 
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