I'm very new to woodworking and deciding on the proper finish to use on my projects was the one thing I could not figure out. Thank you for making sense of it for me. Great video. Very informative.
The best explanatory guide in the differences so far!!! Thank you soooo much!! I wish I had known before I vanished my hall floor because I was not warned about the profound smell or 14 day curing time and am, as a result, sleeping on my couch to get as far away from the smell as possible. Unfortunately, it is a small house so I am suffering with all the side fx off the oil based polymer fumes which are headaches, sour throat, sore and scratchy eyes etc. Before your video, I didn't know how long more the smell would last, now I can expect another week or so, at least there will be an end to it! Thanks again :-)
Thank you for the video, which one would you recommend to be used as a coat for the deck timber floor outside? My concern is the water influence and durability.
Thank you for sharing your hard-earned experience and know-how with us!! Excellent content and commentary on the video, including your replies in text. Truly nice work. Many thanks.
I agree John. Whenever a project will be exposed to heavy usage, or sever weather, oil base will outlast water based most, if not all the time. It may take an extended effort to get there, but is worth it. I'll continue to utilize it in some cases, while the government still allows it. :(
@@joequillun7790 I have to travel to an adjoining state, luckily it's not far, to buy true oil base finish. I really like an eggshell oil base finish on interior wood trim.
Hi , i have a iroko cladded house about 100 m2 .there is a water based varnish on it would you recommend a oil based varnish would it be less maintenance ,and wot would the quantity be for that amount .thanks
6:26 You give a closeup of putting the cup on the table, but you never properly show us the board that compares water and oil based varnishes... which is why I’m here...
Never liked water based varnish because it doesn’t perform very well when using on a large area. With oil based products you know you’ve got time to work with wet/dry edges and these materials have been tried and tested for years.
You are showing comparison details of various products from a mile away and expect viewers to just take your word for it. What's the point really? If you are trying to show us details then give us a closeup shot of the board so we'll be able to get some sort of a feeling of the product, otherwise just put some sort of podcast and get it over with.
Leane Garden that's a problem with a lot of things on utube the presenter is not what we need to see and yet they always use a single camera approach when slit screen is needed to show use the point
@@polyvineuk I'd rather hear from an expert that knows what he's talking about and I would guess has had a hand in developing the product than just a professional TH-camr that is not sure how the product works. All he knows is that it works for him on his particular project. Thanks for sharing, this was very helpful.
Thank you for taking the time to make this video as it helps in my evaluation. It has been difficult to find objective comparisons.
nothings more convincing than a british accent
all you got to do is not watch it son
Beautifully explained, answered questions I didn't even know I might have 😂.
I'm very new to woodworking and deciding on the proper finish to use on my projects was the one thing I could not figure out. Thank you for making sense of it for me. Great video. Very informative.
Thank you
The best explanatory guide in the differences so far!!! Thank you soooo much!! I wish I had known before I vanished my hall floor because I was not warned about the profound smell or 14 day curing time and am, as a result, sleeping on my couch to get as far away from the smell as possible. Unfortunately, it is a small house so I am suffering with all the side fx off the oil based polymer fumes which are headaches, sour throat, sore and scratchy eyes etc. Before your video, I didn't know how long more the smell would last, now I can expect another week or so, at least there will be an end to it! Thanks again :-)
I must Thank you for this informative video that has helped me confirm my choice of the heavy duty water based product!
Very helpfull ....no bullcrap jyst straight to the point ..thank you
Outstanding! Answered many of my questions. Thank you.
This guy pours like a pro, must bartend in his spare time.
Hello
I am from pakistan
I want to paint a wooden pencil What color should i use ?
Please give your opinion .
I am waiting for your reply
thank you
Thank you Sir. Nice presentation. Helped me alot before going to home depot
nice vid , i have a semi gloss white enamel painted tv cabinet , can i use the heavy duty water based poly as top coat to prevent the white paint ?
Clear concise explanations...thank you!
Thank you for the video, which one would you recommend to be used as a coat for the deck timber floor outside? My concern is the water influence and durability.
Very good video ! Nicely explained
Thank you for sharing your hard-earned experience and know-how with us!! Excellent content and commentary on the video, including your replies in text. Truly nice work. Many thanks.
I used a lacquer on a green log slice as a cake stand for a wedding, can I use oil base polyurethane as a top coat to get a deep gloss look
You didn’t show the close up of the difference in the boards hard to see from far away but thanks for explanation.
Are both water-based acrylics & heavy-duty polyurethanes a type of urethane?
Oil base for me, anytime it's an option.
I agree John. Whenever a project will be exposed to heavy usage, or sever weather, oil base will outlast water based most, if not all the time. It may take an extended effort to get there, but is worth it. I'll continue to utilize it in some cases, while the government still allows it. :(
@@joequillun7790 I have to travel to an adjoining state, luckily it's not far, to buy true oil base finish. I really like an eggshell oil base finish on interior wood trim.
Hi , i have a iroko cladded house about 100 m2 .there is a water based varnish on it would you recommend a oil based varnish would it be less maintenance ,and wot would the quantity be for that amount .thanks
Take a look at our new exterior varnish it is water based but lasts as long as an oil based.
will do thanks
thanks for such great explanation
6:26 You give a closeup of putting the cup on the table, but you never properly show us the board that compares water and oil based varnishes... which is why I’m here...
Do you have a equivalent product to minwax wipe on poly (oil) gloss?
He s got a Lab coat on ..so he must be right.
He looks like a pharmacist that replaced the pills with finish's
Just the facts! I like it.
Thank you! glad you enjoyed our video
Very informational. Thanks :)
No, I can’t see, you’re holding it wrong for that. You are looking at it instead of showing it vertically so the camera can see it better.
Never liked water based varnish because it doesn’t perform very well when using on a large area. With oil based products you know you’ve got time to work with wet/dry edges and these materials have been tried and tested for years.
X2. Water based for quick, irrelevant projects, oil based for rough duty.
Much appreciated explanation ~ thankyou.
So should I use water based or oil based?
Oil base for super duty, water base, for quick light duty projects.
Just Beautiful!
thanks matey!
VERY informative! Thank you SO much. 😀👍
You are showing comparison details of various products from a mile away and expect viewers to just take your word for it. What's the point really? If you are trying to show us details then give us a closeup shot of the board so we'll be able to get some sort of a feeling of the product, otherwise just put some sort of podcast and get it over with.
Thank you for your comment, we are doing some more filming soon and we are always looking for ways to improve.
Thanks. I'll be more than happy to see the results like many others I believe.
Leane Garden that's a problem with a lot of things on utube the presenter is not what we need to see and yet they always use a single camera approach when slit screen is needed to show use the point
@@polyvineuk I'd rather hear from an expert that knows what he's talking about and I would guess has had a hand in developing the product than just a professional TH-camr that is not sure how the product works. All he knows is that it works for him on his particular project. Thanks for sharing, this was very helpful.
Based
sht I wanted to see it on wood not mdf :(
Is this KFC cousin??
t yourself thanks to woodprix plans. I think it's the best way to learn how to build it in the cheapest way.
MDF really ? That's all what u have ? No timber ,no grain just shxxt ?
No thanks !
Oh, no...it's gone over my attention span...what was the point?
I was wondering the same thing. Was there a conclusion?
Somehow it feels like German precision...
soo confusing vedio