![]() |
Boiled Linseed oil to preserve patina?
1 Attachment(s)
So the Idea came from people on YouTube doing it and it looks decent. Scrub the whole truck down with Ajax and a scotch bright pad. Wipe it clean and then apply a mixture of boiled linseed oil and mineral spirits. Then wipe off the excess and Bob's your uncle.
Has anybody tried this in the real world? Is it reversible? Does it attract dust? Is it sticky or greasy to the touch? |
Re: Boiled Linseed oil to preserve patina?
I tried something similar using GIBBs oil. Eventually it just dried back out. If you want to preserve the patina, consider clear-coating it.
|
Re: Boiled Linseed oil to preserve patina?
A friend used this on a Chevy truck, looks great, made for what you want to do.
https://www.por15.com/Matte-clear-coat |
Re: Boiled Linseed oil to preserve patina?
Quote:
|
Re: Boiled Linseed oil to preserve patina?
Yeah I dont want it to be shiny. Just some kind of sealer to cover what I have so I can touch the truck without having to wash my hands lol.
|
Re: Boiled Linseed oil to preserve patina?
I have done it and it looks good for about 6 months , then rub it on again .
|
Re: Boiled Linseed oil to preserve patina?
Quote:
|
Re: Boiled Linseed oil to preserve patina?
1 Attachment(s)
We do the 68 every 3-4 months
|
Re: Boiled Linseed oil to preserve patina?
Quote:
|
Re: Boiled Linseed oil to preserve patina?
I did CLR mixed with water in a spray bottle and a white scotch pad. Start off with a less CLR to water ratio and make stronger if needed.
|
Re: Boiled Linseed oil to preserve patina?
Had a coworker that used to do that to all his cars (new and old) as a rust preventative becuase he was too cheap to go to one of the local oil spray places. Every fall he would do the paint and the underside. Seemed to do the trick, one of his vehicles was an 80's chrysler minivan. From memory, (this guy has been retired for at least 10 years now) the paint was only super shiney for the first couple of days until everything dried out.
|
Re: Boiled Linseed oil to preserve patina?
2 Attachment(s)
Quote:
I know some dont like the shiny patina look but this was done with compound and wax no clear on it at all and it does tone down after a few weeks |
Re: Boiled Linseed oil to preserve patina?
I've used Sweet Patina Sauce. I am guessing that boiled linseed oil is part of the ingredients. It works well and is not shiny after you rub off the extra.
https://sweetpatina.com/ |
Re: Boiled Linseed oil to preserve patina?
1 Attachment(s)
I use Penetrol on dried out paint as needed. I gently clean with Griot's first then give a heavy coat of Penetrol. I just cleaned and lubed up this off-brand a couple days ago. I just try to preserve what is there and otherwise not mess with it. Best thing for old paint is to keep it out of the weather.
For the frames and undercarriage I use Boeshield T9. |
Re: Boiled Linseed oil to preserve patina?
Back to the original question. I've used boiled linseed oil to preserve finishes for as long as I can remember. What you need to do is mix it with mineral spirits or turpentine. I mix it heavy on the linseed side, probably about 30-40% mineral spirits. That thins the linseed and allows it to dry. Just spray, wipe, or brush on and walk away, same as paint. It's good for about 6 months. It seals w/o being shiny. It repels water. It's what I put on log walls, weathered wood, old enameled signs, and wrought iron to preserve them
|
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 04:52 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
Copyright 1997-2025 67-72chevytrucks.com