pontyslapper
Brought a Landy to LZ11. Yay!!
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Right. Finished off waterproofing Mulberry's full tilt during the dry weather yesterday. Today, it's raining... that nasty wet drizzle that soaks you through. SUCCESS!! A dry interior so far.
The recipe for those who are interested is as follows, also some tips based on my experiences.
I mixed up 'half pound' mixes and used about 3 or so. This gave me a break from the smell and it was what would fit nicely in my saucepan.
You'll need the following kit...
Gas camping stove. I used one that takes aerosol type canisters as more stable.
Old saucepan. Get a decent sized one.
Old wooden spoon.
Old measuring jug.
Kitchen scales. Wifeys one did fluids and solids so was well easy.
Paintbrush. I use cheap 79p 4" jobs
Heat gun or hair dryer at a push
Ingredients
1kg of pure beeswax pellets - I got mine from Amazon for about 15 quid.
500ml bottle of boiled linseed oil
500ml bottle of turps substitute
Method
I mixed up about 227g of beeswax with 114ml of oil and 114ml of turps at a time as this would fit in my pan nicely.
Heat the stuff until beeswax is fully melted. Stirring all the while.
Now paint it on your canvas roof. Making sure that you're not slapping it on too thick. It's very strange as it's a warm liquid but it solidifies as soon as it hits the tilt. It takes some practice to get the right level. I found just getting the first 2cm of bristles wet works for the right thickness. If it starts to harden in the pan when painting it on just rewarm it again and carry on.
Once it dries back you'll be left with a whitish waxy looking sheen on your tilt.
Fire up the heat gun and play it over the waxy sheen. You'll see the wax turn liquid and soak into the tilt. KEEP THE HEAT MOVING or you'll burn your tilt. Again, you'll quickly get the feel for this.
The smell subsides in a day or so in dry weather. But it's waterproof straight away.
I found doing a natural section of tilt at a time meant I knew where I was. It's easier to do it fitted than on the floor.
I used 3 and a half lots of mixture for my 88" full tilt that was porous before treatment.
I mixed up the last of the beeswax, oil and turps and filled an old lyles syrup tin and a good sized jam jar. So I have about 1.25kg of waterproofer ready for next time.
It might not be as quick as modern waterproofing liquids, and the cost of materials was about 20 quid, but I like the idea of old methods and the stuff coating the fibres with a wax base rather than goodness knows what chemical concoction.
The recipe for those who are interested is as follows, also some tips based on my experiences.
I mixed up 'half pound' mixes and used about 3 or so. This gave me a break from the smell and it was what would fit nicely in my saucepan.
You'll need the following kit...
Gas camping stove. I used one that takes aerosol type canisters as more stable.
Old saucepan. Get a decent sized one.
Old wooden spoon.
Old measuring jug.
Kitchen scales. Wifeys one did fluids and solids so was well easy.
Paintbrush. I use cheap 79p 4" jobs
Heat gun or hair dryer at a push
Ingredients
1kg of pure beeswax pellets - I got mine from Amazon for about 15 quid.
500ml bottle of boiled linseed oil
500ml bottle of turps substitute
Method
I mixed up about 227g of beeswax with 114ml of oil and 114ml of turps at a time as this would fit in my pan nicely.
Heat the stuff until beeswax is fully melted. Stirring all the while.
Now paint it on your canvas roof. Making sure that you're not slapping it on too thick. It's very strange as it's a warm liquid but it solidifies as soon as it hits the tilt. It takes some practice to get the right level. I found just getting the first 2cm of bristles wet works for the right thickness. If it starts to harden in the pan when painting it on just rewarm it again and carry on.
Once it dries back you'll be left with a whitish waxy looking sheen on your tilt.
Fire up the heat gun and play it over the waxy sheen. You'll see the wax turn liquid and soak into the tilt. KEEP THE HEAT MOVING or you'll burn your tilt. Again, you'll quickly get the feel for this.
The smell subsides in a day or so in dry weather. But it's waterproof straight away.
I found doing a natural section of tilt at a time meant I knew where I was. It's easier to do it fitted than on the floor.
I used 3 and a half lots of mixture for my 88" full tilt that was porous before treatment.
I mixed up the last of the beeswax, oil and turps and filled an old lyles syrup tin and a good sized jam jar. So I have about 1.25kg of waterproofer ready for next time.
It might not be as quick as modern waterproofing liquids, and the cost of materials was about 20 quid, but I like the idea of old methods and the stuff coating the fibres with a wax base rather than goodness knows what chemical concoction.