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Cleaning Wood - Alcohol
By Jan Kijlstra

Bruce Mercer wrote in 050904 MMD Digest, in reaction to my writing in
050831 MMD Digest, in which I stated: "So denatured alcohol is not
free of water. It has water in it as well":

> This is not correct. I should have been more specific as there
> is more than one type of alcohol that is called denatured".
> One type that has no water in it is the type sold for use as
> a thinner for shellac.

This narrows the subject.  The question now is: what actually is
shellac thinner.

Bruce suggested to look on the Internet, which I did earlier, of
course.  Well, I checked again, using Google.  Here is just one of
many results:

> http://www.frets.com <http://www.frets.com/ 
> Denatured alcohol is really ethanol with a small amount of bad stuff
> in it so you can't drink it, and it works very well.  It is important,
> though, to get a good grade of denatured alcohol.  The cheap grades,
> often sold as "shellac thinner," have too much water or other
> impurities to be effective in a fine finishing product.  Too much
> water will make the resulting shellac finish come out cloudy looking,
> and we don't want that!

I, again, was unable to find a shellac thinner (or any other
denatured alcohol) without water as one of the components.  Maybe
Bruce can give us the Internet sites he suggests to look for?

A nice advice on cleaning wood I did find on the 'Net; may be of help:

> Q. I have a teak dining room table that looks like it has been
> through hell.  When I first bought it, my wife applied some sort
> of polish to it, which I later discovered was not the thing to do.
> There are many water stains and rings on it as well as general
> wearing.  I would like to refinish it and know that it needs teak
> oil.  What is the best way to remove the old residue and get the
> nice teak look back?
>
> A. A 50/50 mix of lacquer thinner and denatured alcohol (shellac
> thinner) should remove all traces of residue/finish/polish, etc.
> You'll need a wood bleach (oxalic acid) to remove dark watermarks.
> Household bleach will not work as well, if at all.

Please note that this author also refers to denatured alcohol as
shellac thinner.

Jan Kijlstra



(Message sent Tue, 06 Sep 2005 13:13:22 +0200 , from time zone +0200.)

Key Words in Subject:  Alcohol, Cleaning, Wood

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