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Thread: Restoring old Redwood- resin removal and live edge help

  1. #1

    Restoring old Redwood- resin removal and live edge help

    I have come across an old redwood bar that I have since taken apart and begun to work on. The biggest piece is the piece I am most excited about as well as the squared looking piece. I am going to list the problems I have with the pieces and then the questions I have.
    IMG_5142.jpg
    Problems
    • The pieces have this terrible resin on them that is hard to remove. I destroyed the back of this piece and am planning on using the opposite side which is just as good. However I want to remove all this junk to have a nice finish.
    • IMG_5145.jpg
    • On this bigger piece, I have a really cool live edge that I am planning on utilizing, but I need advice on getting rid of the rot and cleaning it up IMG_5143.jpg
    • On the smaller square piece I have a cool live edge and am interested in making prestiene.
    • IMG_5146.jpg




    QUESTIONS
    1. How do I remove the resin
    2. How to I preserve my life edges
    3. How should I progress through sanding
    4. A lot of the pieces have a natural curve on the surface, should I make them all perfectly level surfaces? or keep the natural curve.
    5. Please trow any ideas you have at me. I need advice and tips to help make this project killer.



    Below is the stack of wood from the leftover bar. Ideas are welcome.......
    IMG_5154.jpg
    Attached Images Attached Images
    Last edited by Nick Ahrold; 10-02-2016 at 11:43 PM.

  2. #2
    Join Date
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    Resin as in a finish sone one applied?

    Find a wide belt sander to run the thing thru and grind it off?

    On the rot , pressure wash it off , or have it soda blasted ?

    For the sake of wood , I'm thinking you meant "stack" , Live edge shelving ? Clock faces , re-saw to get a couple out of each , trivets / hot plates, again resaw to get max use of stock?

  3. #3
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    A sawmill / band saw could re-saw a slice off each side to get rid of the resin / finish. Or a slab flattening jig to use a router to flatten get rid of the resin / finish . See FWW for the slab flattening jig if you don't know what that is.

  4. #4
    Paul,
    The belt sander wont get the details on the side of the piece.
    I should pressure wash, but any other methods?

    I want to keep these pieces as big as possible. Maybe a desk, and a coffee table. iron hairpin legs...

    I just need to figure out how to get the most potential out of these edges without having to jigsaw them off.

    Thanks,

  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by Nick Ahrold View Post
    Paul,
    The belt sander wont get the details on the side of the piece.
    I should pressure wash, but any other methods?

    I want to keep these pieces as big as possible. Maybe a desk, and a coffee table. iron hairpin legs...

    I just need to figure out how to get the most potential out of these edges without having to jigsaw them off.

    Thanks,

    Is the resin finish ? I think if you break the seal off the faces , the live edge "finish , or resin" may break down a LOT easier if you can get lacquer thinners or even MEK , Acetone or the like to soak into the now degraded finish.

    So IF you can sand the top and bottom , you can then attack the "resin" that's on the live edge is my thinking.

  6. #6

    Need Help with these live edges

    NEED HELP WITH THESE LIVE EDGES
    how do I go about sanding and finishing. I have no idea where to begin.,..
    IMG_5143.jpgIMG_5142.jpg

  7. #7
    The "resin" (its more like a flakey plastic at this point) isnt the huge issue.
    I am more interested on how I will sand these live edges and make this a presentable piece.

    Thanks!

  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by Nick Ahrold View Post
    The "resin" (its more like a flakey plastic at this point) isnt the huge issue.
    I am more interested on how I will sand these live edges and make this a presentable piece.

    Thanks!

    I don't think you will "sand" the live edge, maybe you can wire brush it , after or while you soften the "resin / finish" that been applied to it it.

    Good luck.

  9. #9
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    What about a handheld power planer to remove the resin surface? If it doesn't easily chip off I'd try the power planer.

  10. #10
    Maybe a wire wheel to remove any bark or soft/rotted areas (knotted for really aggressive, straight for regular work), followed by a small power sander (flap sander in a drill maybe, or the edge of a flexible ROS pad).

  11. #11
    I would just use a wire brush and scrub those edges firmly. This will remove loose dirt and bark. Wash it with soap and water, let dry, then finish. Personally I wouldn't alter the edge or try to improve it in any way. I would break and smooth the edges with 150 grit sandpaper. I'd aim to remove edge sharpness not surface texture.

  12. #12
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    I agree with Prashun. You mostly just want to clean the live edge and remove any loose pieces. You could also shoot it with compressed air and/or a sharp stream of water from a hose. Generally speaking, it looks pretty clean so you may not have much work to do. I assume it'll be a side, coffee table kinda thing? What kind of legs are you thinking?
    Wood: a fickle medium....

    Did you know SMC is user supported? Please help.

  13. #13
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    The live edges should be dealt with via a stiff wire brush first. If that doesn't do the job you might need to find a sandblaster so you can carefully blast away and smooth out the edges. I wouldn't advocate a powered grinder or sander unless you really don't want the live edge character

  14. #14
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    Could the resin be poured on polyurethane or epoxy? Would a heat gun and scraper help to take that stuff off? I've never tried this, just a thought.
    Mark McFarlane

  15. #15
    I was thinking about doing simple iron hairpin legs. That is a whole additional topic; what I had planned was to use a router to carve out the inlay of the base of the leg.

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