#22
Just saw this on Ask This Old House, where they built a box and finished it with polyurethane glue, and applied a coat of wax. Very interesting.
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#23
Not interested, absolutely no protection for wood surface!
Bill
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#24
Interesting, I suppose.  But I would have to ask;  Why?
If you are going down a river at 2 mph and your canoe loses a wheel, how much pancake mix would you need to shingle your roof?

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#25
(06-02-2017, 05:55 AM)Wildwood Wrote: Not interested, absolutely no protection for wood surface!

I can't visualize what they did... but isn't Gorilla Glue waterproof?
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#26
(06-04-2017, 06:07 AM)KC Wrote: I can't visualize what they did... but isn't Gorilla Glue waterproof?
Urethane.  Sounds like there's some protection as with other film finishes. https://safety.as.arizona.edu/msds/Gorilla_Glue.pdf
Better to follow the leader than the pack. Less to step in.
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#27
(06-05-2017, 11:13 AM)MichaelMouse Wrote: Urethane.  Sounds like there's some protection as with other film finishes. https://safety.as.arizona.edu/msds/Gorilla_Glue.pdf

Watched the snippet on YouTube.  Looks like it would work but probably not my first choice for a finish.

Dab a little on and rub it in.  Keep rubbing.  Then when dry, they sanded again up to a high grit, 1200 maybe.
Don't sweat the petty things and don't pet the sweaty things. -- G. Carlin
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#28
Well I'm going to try it because I have a little bottle of GG that I have found absolutely no other use for.
"Links to news stories don’t cut it."  MsNomer 3/2/24
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#29
Just watched the Ask TOH episode. Sanded the Koa to 1200 grit, wiped on the glue, wiping it every 10 minutes for 45 minutes. Then sanded with 1200, followed by paste wax.

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#30
Apparently this is being used as a finish for fishing rods (not much square inches of coverage).  Here is a discussion on that:

http://classicflyrodforum.com/forum/view...66&t=57854
No animals were injured or killed in the production of this post.
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#31
It was a procedure used by a woodworker in Hawaii.  My guess is it developed because of the difficulty of getting solvent-based finishes in Hawaii.  (I'm guessing here.)  Rather than diluting the polyurethane in a lot of solvent and brushing it on, the much thicker glue without solvent is rubbed in: you are trading elbow grease for mineral spirits. 

He let it react with ambient moisture from the air and wood, instead of spraying on extra water, and didn't get foaming.

My problem with polyurethane glue is that it is nasty stuff to work with and hard to clean up.  Using it as a finish won't help with that.
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Gorilla Glue as a Finish


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