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Finishing Bed Wood with oil: Does it last, Let's just see
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I decided to Oil my bed wood. I know there are lots of post on this; but this post is different. This will be kind of a case study for Tung Oil. I never really saw anyone with a 10+ year old bed that was oil finished and how it fared. So here's a post with a, hopefully, searchable title to see the actual wear and tear and needed maintenance. I will attempt to keep this post updated periodically with pics, so perhaps others in the future will have better info for the "Oil or Not Oil" decision.
I you are in the process of oiling bed wood(especially something other than tung) you should post here of your application and some periodic pics of wear results. I was at the Brother truck show a couple weeks ago, lot's of examples of what varnish does! Here's my process and materials. Quick Note: I'm not a Tung Oil evangelist! It's what I choose, so I'm just going to give honest info on the end results... whether I have to eat crow or not! If my process turns to $hit in 5 years, you will see it here! You will see how it weathers and when it weathers. I've had good luck with this type of Oil though(there, that statement just solidified it, it going to *ell in a hand basket) :lol: Materials: Yellow pine bed wood kit. Pure tung oil. Turpentine. Why I chose Tung Oil. I think tung oil will give better protection for water then blo(boiled linseed oil) blo has additives for drying, but so does most tung sold as exterior use oil. I don't really pay attention, interior exterior, pure tung is pure tung. Safety Note: Learn about drying oils and how to avoid starting a fire in your shop! Here's what I did. Sanded with a heavy hand using 200 Coat 1: 50/50 tung oil and turpentine. I mixed in a jar and applied with foam applicator. Rubbed down after about an hour. Coat 2: Hit it lightly with 200. applied 75/25 oil/turpentine. rubbed down after about and hour. Coat 3: Hit with 0000 steel wool. Used a condiment dispenser from walmart to squirt a bead of straight oil along the boards, spread with foam applicator. Rubbed down after a few hours with cotton cloth. Coat 4 -8 same as above, except I only used steel wool on the spots that looked like they needed it. Last coat no steel wool and a very light wipe down. But the bottom of the boards I did not rub down. Plus I baked the boards bottom side up in the driveway on a couple 100 degree+ days, after the 4th coat. So I slathered the bottom and sides then baked. It will dry with a nice layer. When I got to coats 6-8 on the tops(when I was doing top only) I did not bake in driveway. Just cracked the front and rear garage doors and got a good convection going. I also blotted the end grains heavily with the applicator each time. The ends ate up the oil pretty good cut and straight. My last coat of tung oil was applied almost three weeks ago. I couple days before I installed the wood. Tung Oil Dries sloooooow!:cuss: But it will get hard... some day! Patience is a virtue with tung oil! July 2016 3 weeks in So here's the first progress report: The truck has been in the sun for three days straight. The bed wood is still slightly tacky, but that's OK, I laid it on pretty thick especially the last coat. I'm thinking if this weather keeps up I'll have it hardened in another couple weeks. It was under a tree for a bit over the weekend. The leaves and dust swept out fine, it's tacky not sticky; so everything does not stick to it like fly paper. Tacky not sticky, if that makes any sense. I'll post again at any next major event worth logging! |
Re: Finishing Bed Wood with oil: Does it last, Let's just see
That looks great! I wish my truck still had a wood bed....
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Re: Finishing Bed Wood with oil: Does it last, Let's just see
Someone trolled a wood bed being oiled post? Kinda wish I'd seen that, I can't imagine.
Is it still continuing to dry? I'm 5th generation paint/hardware store and I've never heard of Tung oil, though I've sold a lot of linseed oil in my lifetime. How long does it take to fully harden? I mean is it days, weeks, or sometime next year? It hardens on exposure to air, but how long it takes I have no idea... |
Re: Finishing Bed Wood with oil: Does it last, Let's just see
That looks perfect!
Did you select each piece of wood yourself at the lumberyard and then fabricate the boards or was that a bed wood kit? If it is a kit which brand? I think you did the right thing choosing the Tung oil. Here is a cut-and-paste of the first paragraph of the wiki about oil polymerization as a refresher for others who might be interested: ******************* A drying oil is an oil that hardens to a tough, solid film after a period of exposure to air. The oil hardens through a chemical reaction in which the components crosslink (and hence, polymerize) by the action of oxygen (not through the evaporation of water or other solvents). Drying oils are a key component of oil paint and some varnishes. Some commonly used drying oils include linseed oil, tung oil, poppy seed oil, perilla oil, and walnut oil. Their use has declined over the past several decades, as they have been replaced by alkyd resins and other binders. Since oxidation is the key to curing in these oils, those that are susceptible to chemical drying are often unsuitable for cooking, and are also highly susceptible to becoming rancid through autoxidation, the process by which fatty foods develop off-flavors.[1] Rags, cloth, and paper saturated with drying oils may combust spontaneously (ignite) in a few hours as heat is released during the oxidation process ****************** |
Re: Finishing Bed Wood with oil: Does it last, Let's just see
I believe your truck bed looks fantastic. I'm well aware of tung oil as my grand parents used it all the time to refinish furniture. I need to do my bed in the future and am also thinking of using Pine. I know the beds, wood & strips both were painted from the factory, but the finish looks great. Did you paint the strips? It's hard to tell in the pictures. I'm anxious to see how it does over time. Thanks for taking the time to write this article and posting the picture.
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Re: Finishing Bed Wood with oil: Does it last, Let's just see
looks excellent , I think mar kay did an evaluation of many finishes , and reported on it on their site
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I used a Danish Oil Finish on the wood for the 4x4 Longhorn. I went out to the shop to check on the brand name but I couldn't find the can.... You would understand if you saw my shop...:(... Anyway, I had a head start on my finish because the wood was cut from old power poles. It has been finished for about a year but I just started driving the truck this spring to work the bugs out of it. We shall see what it does. LockDoc |
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Who is that young man working on the bed ? :chevy:
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That's my Grandpa.....:lol:..(I wish) LockDoc |
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LockDoc |
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Both the beds shown look great!
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I'm not a wood bed fan, usually skip over threads about them, and as such hadn't seen a wood bed in a white truck. Until today. Wow. That is gorgeous!
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Both beds look great! I love how the grain comes out in both.
I have used Lynn Seed Oil on a few period correct jobs that the customer said thats what they used back in the 50s. it looks great but I usually have to sand and re finish it every 2-3 years. kyle |
Re: Finishing Bed Wood with oil: Does it last, Let's just see
Any oil will leach out in time and need more coating. The thing is, it gets deeper the more you do and it will never scratch or peel. You just clean and re-apply. You can sand if you want to keep smooth or let it age with time without the rot. For a work truck a great oil is used motor oil thinned with kerosene. Ever seen oil soaked wood blocks in the shop or an old wood shop floor? That stuff couldn't absorb water if it wanted to.
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Here's an update on the Tung Oil. As said I will post as I do anything to the wood. I put another coat of oil on the wood a week ago. The wood did not look like it needed any oil. But I set out to put on another coat so, I did so.
Took about 15 minutes! Two week ago in anticipation of the applying more oil, I got out the can of white rustoleum and touched up some scratches in the bed strips and wheel wells. I did not tape, just touched up with a foam applicator. The following weekend, last weekend I applied the oil. I squeezed oil onto the wood from a condiment container. Then used a green scotch brite pad to spread the oil. I used light pressure. Then after a few minutes I wiped the whole thing down with a cloth. Done! What the bedwood has been through since install till this reapplication. I have done a couple projects. One major refurbish or a rental house with lots of demo rubble. I chickened out and put a piece of sacrificial plywood down for protection. But after I finished that project, I used the plywood. And after that the truck bed has been used with no protection. One more minor demo project, and I had two 40gal trees with bare root balls in the bed. Big muddy mess with boots grinding mud into the bedwood. It hosed out fine and I wiped it with a wet wash towel after the hose out to get the ground in mud out. It rained yesterday here so I also included a rain pic of the wood. Current Oiling and three months prior original oiling. Attachment 1585921 Condiment container and scotch brite, only 15 minutes. Attachment 1585922 beads up nice in rain. Attachment 1585923 |
Re: Finishing Bed Wood with oil: Does it last, Let's just see
That looks really good. I was going to do oak and do all the fancy stain and clear. Now you have me rethinking my idea:devil:
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Yes, they were Cedar power poles. The nice thing about it is Cedar is really easy to work with. I am going to get some more pieces of it tomorrow. LockDoc |
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You will have to repeat the oil treatment on at least a yearly basis, as it dries out. If it doesn't take very long, no big deal.
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Tung oil has been used by the Chinese since 400BC. It is used to preserve both stone and wood.
It was used on the Great Wall of China and by the US Military in WWII. Good stuff. |
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Been a bit over a year since the bed wood install with tung oil, and 9 months since the last oiling.
Spent ten minutes applying oil this afternoon. But I did spend a little extra time touching up the strips and tail gate to repair scraped off and scratched paint this morning before oiling. What the wood has been through since last oiling. Lots of leaves from trees it was parked under a lot of the time during fall and winter. Caused a lot of black from rotted leaves, but it cleaned up on hose down. The biggest damage I did to the wood was hauling railroad ties. The creosote soaked old ties left black scrapes along the wood from being shoved in and dragged out of the bed. Scraped up some bed strips and the tailgate. I scrubbed the crap out of the bed the week after I hauled the ties with a stiff scrub brush and simple green; and the black marks came out. I was really surprised. Anyhow, I have not babied the wood, it gets no special treatment. The wood is getting an orange like patina. Looks real good. I slathered on some oil using a green scotch brite and a heavy hand to bring up as much amplitude as the scotch brite will enable. I did not wipe the bed wood down with a cloth after the application. I set it in the sun and forgot about it. All good... the easy button... it's why I went with oil. The oil in the pic below is wet, it is a pic after fresh application. Will update again on the next oil treatment. Attachment 1675841 |
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I'm a woodworker by trade and had extra maple wood grain laminate and exterior glued ply on hand. Since it was free and left over from a commercial job I used it to see how it would work. Was an Experiment which I could always chnge to oak or pine later. Plus I had to stop the financial bleeding on the truck at end of the project.
I like when I go to a cruise in and someone asks "how did you get such a good finish on that" Durable. UV resistant and looks great. Mark |
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Any update on the oil? I’m planning my re-do of the bed for the summer
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j |
Re: Finishing Bed Wood with oil: Does it last, Let's just see
I have chosen a similar route to bed wood preservation. I painted the bottoms and sides with POR-15 like the Mar-K tests and gave two coats of an oil based "antique" stain to the tops. It merely has some gray to it that soaks into the coarser grains and gives it a little bit of an aged look. Form here, I hope that the occasional reapplication of some sort of oil will be all it takes. My truck will always be garaged when not being driven to work and such, and I bet this will last my lifetime with a little elbow grease every year or two. I have treated quite a few wood trailer beds with used motor oil and the owners of the trailers that I bowered them from were always appreciative and said that it helps especially when the trailers are in constant use and/or stored outside.
I think we are onto something here considering that we do not require that glossy show quality bed wood. |
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If you can. Post pics and the products you used, and periodically update the progress of the products performance. I think it's valuable to out with the results so truckers down the road can see how other options fair in the real world. We all see what varnish does. :chevy:
j |
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jeffahart,
I didn't see how long it took for the tung oil to fully dry after the first application. Did it take a longer or shorter time to dry on the additional applications? Larry |
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j |
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almost a year since last update. hows the oiled wood? i am ready to do my own and thinking of going the oil route.
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:mm:
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j |
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Lot of nice looking wood beds...I treat my wood bed once a year (whether it needs it or not) with used motor oil. I mop it on liberally on a hot summer morning after a good high pressure cleaning a day or two prior to oiling. The oil seeps through and coats the fastening hardware protecting it as well...Nothing fancy because I haul dirt, rock, straw and brush as well as tools and fuel barrels. My truck spends it's life outside in the rain sleet snow and blazing sun...Nothing Fancy...;)
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