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Weatherproofing lauhala matting
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Iolani
Posted
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Sat, Jun 10, 2017 12:55 PM
Hello. I intend to build an outdoor bar as a summer project with my son and plan to use some lauhala matting on the front and sides. Can anybody suggest a good way to make it a bit weather resistant? We plan a design that we'll keep out during the summer, but break down and store for the winter. |
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Prikli Pear
Posted
posted
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Tue, Jun 13, 2017 6:51 AM
I don't know how well it would work on lauhala, but I've had good experiences with Flood CFW UV. For my climate, at least, the UV component is essential. The intensity of the sun is simply brutal from June through September. I've found it a little thick to be effectively applied via sprayer, but it brushes or rolls on easily enough (particularly the clear, unpigmented version). |
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Iolani
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posted
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Tue, Jun 13, 2017 3:43 PM
Thanks for the tip. I will add it to my list of products to research. I'm in the South, so I'm keeping the sun as well as summer rainstorms in mind. I want to prevent mold and mildew as much as possible. I've thought about spraying them down with an anti-mold and mildew spray, then following up with a hydrophobic coating. It's all an experiment. |
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Prikli Pear
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Tue, Jun 13, 2017 9:50 PM
I know the feeling. I'm making most of this up as I go along. But I've been happy with the protection Flood offers on my privacy fence--which the previous owners neglected terribly--so I figure it will do just as well on my woven bamboo paneling. It at least seems to have sticking power. I tried some Thompson's water seal on the boo and it never dried, never soaked in. All it did was make a mess. I'd never see that happen before. |
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tikiskip
Posted
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Wed, Jun 14, 2017 8:05 AM
New bamboo and reed has a waxy coating that is natural. If you think of this stuff as paper how would you protect it? If wood comes from a tree then we mash it to make paper the farther you get from the tree Same with bamboo if the matting is the skin of reed it gets less durable, AND it's woven so the weave keeps moisture in and that's not good. It's just not a good fit for outdoors, we get lots o rain, snow, cold so it's really bad here. "but Skip I see it at parks like Disney" yep they got guy that fix stuff every day 24/7 Good luck, I say use something that will last a bit longer and spend more time drinking and less time and money on matting. |
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Iolani
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Fri, Jun 16, 2017 1:27 PM
Thanks for the post, Skip. I just found your "best and worst things" thread. A lot of food for thought, and cautionary tales. |
Pages: 1 5 replies