aidancoughlan
Well-Known Member
Varnish - \"dry spots\", but only on the chart table - why ?
I started sanding & varnishing several weeks ago on the interior of my Westerly Merlin. The steps, galley area, after bulkhead doors, chart table area. All seems to have gone well, except a strange phenomenon on the chart table : each coat we put on it results in some parts of it ending up with "dry spots" - areas where the varnish doesnt seem to stick to. It only seems to happen on the outside (inboard) side of the flat table top (not on other areas around the table). The chart table top is the only large flat area - everything else has been vertical and/or small horizontal surfaces.
Theories:
I know nothing about varnishing other than what I have recently read here and on the web, but my theories are:
(1) There is something strange on the inboard side of the chart table top surface (or in the wood) which makes it difficult to varnish.
(2) It is to do with the way I am applying it - I start cautiously & slowly on the outboard edge, and work inwards - and subconciously start to move quicker as I move across the surface. Maybe this is why it tends to happen on this side.
(3) I am simply not applying enough varnish to the brush, and it is running out of varnish mid-stroke?
(4) The varnish is not thin enough, and is drying out too quickly on the brush ? I have been using unthinned Goldspar, although I tried thinning the last one about 5-10% to see if it helped. I *think* it might have helped a bit, but still some dry spots.
Any ideas ? Is there a common mistake I may be making ?
I started sanding & varnishing several weeks ago on the interior of my Westerly Merlin. The steps, galley area, after bulkhead doors, chart table area. All seems to have gone well, except a strange phenomenon on the chart table : each coat we put on it results in some parts of it ending up with "dry spots" - areas where the varnish doesnt seem to stick to. It only seems to happen on the outside (inboard) side of the flat table top (not on other areas around the table). The chart table top is the only large flat area - everything else has been vertical and/or small horizontal surfaces.
Theories:
I know nothing about varnishing other than what I have recently read here and on the web, but my theories are:
(1) There is something strange on the inboard side of the chart table top surface (or in the wood) which makes it difficult to varnish.
(2) It is to do with the way I am applying it - I start cautiously & slowly on the outboard edge, and work inwards - and subconciously start to move quicker as I move across the surface. Maybe this is why it tends to happen on this side.
(3) I am simply not applying enough varnish to the brush, and it is running out of varnish mid-stroke?
(4) The varnish is not thin enough, and is drying out too quickly on the brush ? I have been using unthinned Goldspar, although I tried thinning the last one about 5-10% to see if it helped. I *think* it might have helped a bit, but still some dry spots.
Any ideas ? Is there a common mistake I may be making ?