h

21/11/2006 8:06 AM

Finishing a mantle

I am finishing a mantle made of Red Oak, and am looking for
recommendations on finishing techniques that can withstand a little bit
of heat. Tung oil? Polyurethane? Lacquer? Any ideas would be
welcome.

Thanks!


This topic has 5 replies

dp

"damian penney"

in reply to [email protected] on 21/11/2006 8:06 AM

21/11/2006 9:11 AM


[email protected] wrote:
> I am finishing a mantle made of Red Oak, and am looking for
> recommendations on finishing techniques that can withstand a little bit
> of heat. Tung oil? Polyurethane? Lacquer? Any ideas would be
> welcome.
>
> Thanks!

Mantle shouldn't really be getting hot at all so anything will do, I
like lacquer though.

n

in reply to [email protected] on 21/11/2006 8:06 AM

21/11/2006 9:34 AM


[email protected] wrote:
> I am finishing a mantle made of Red Oak, and am looking for
> recommendations on finishing techniques that can withstand a little bit
> of heat. Tung oil? Polyurethane? Lacquer? Any ideas would be
> welcome.
>
> Thanks!

I think I would focus on the actual finish than heat concerns. If you
are worried about the heat affecting the wood, then your mantle is too
close to the fire.

I work in houses all the time that have latex paint, oil based paint,
varnish, lacquer and varnish. No finish problems visible.

Robert

Ds

"DonkeyHody"

in reply to [email protected] on 21/11/2006 8:06 AM

25/11/2006 2:44 PM


[email protected] wrote:
> I am finishing a mantle made of Red Oak, and am looking for
> recommendations on finishing techniques that can withstand a little bit
> of heat. Tung oil? Polyurethane? Lacquer? Any ideas would be
> welcome.
>
> Thanks!

I finished my mantel with tung oil and have had no problems at all. My
mantel barely gets warm to the touch. However, my dad's unvented gas
logs allow the heat to rise right up the face of the fireplace and
become trapped by the mantel. The underside of his mantel gets much
hotter than it ever did when he was burning wood like God intended.
However, the heat still isn't enough to cause a problem with the
finish. It is far more likely to cause problems with over-drying the
wood, which could lead to shrinkage issues.

DonkeyHody
"Every man is my superior in that I can learn from him." - Thomas
Carlyle

AG

Art Greenberg

in reply to [email protected] on 21/11/2006 8:06 AM

21/11/2006 6:09 PM

On 21 Nov 2006 08:06:59 -0800, [email protected] wrote:

> I am finishing a mantle made of Red Oak, and am looking for recommendations
> on finishing techniques that can withstand a little bit of heat. Tung oil?
> Polyurethane? Lacquer? Any ideas would be welcome.

I just built and started installing a contemporary-style mantel. It is over a
gas insert. With the insert running full blast, the mantel bottom and face get
pretty warm, but not so warm that I can't keep my hand on it.

I finished it with wipe-on poly. No problems due to heat so far.

--
Art Greenberg
artg at eclipse dot net

Pn

Phisherman

in reply to [email protected] on 21/11/2006 8:06 AM

25/11/2006 5:44 PM

On 21 Nov 2006 08:06:59 -0800, [email protected] wrote:

>I am finishing a mantle made of Red Oak, and am looking for
>recommendations on finishing techniques that can withstand a little bit
>of heat. Tung oil? Polyurethane? Lacquer? Any ideas would be
>welcome.
>
>Thanks!

Finishes nor wood should be expected to hold up to heat. There is not
much to prevent scorching--possibly covering with some kind of metal
foil. There are code regulations about how far your mantle can be
from the fireplace opening and how far out from the wall it can be. If
you follow these guidelines you can use any finish.


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