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Shutter finishing

12/5/22       
Craig Caughlan  Member

Website: https://www.instagram.com/craigcaughlan/

I’m quoting a shutter project; non-movable, both the shutters and the louvers. The louvers are 10x45mm with a separation distance on the inclined plane of 6mm. 70 shutters – 48-63 louvers – 3,500 louvers total. All in Accoya with Benjamin Moore WB Arborcoat specified as the exterior stain,

I would prefer to spray finish after glue-up, but I don’t know this stain, and I would have to import a gallon to see what it is, which is probably what I should do. The application instructions say, “Back-brushing is recommended after with roller or spray application.” Is this a typo? The viscosity at KU94 is thick. I’ve only HVLP at the moment, having sold my Kremlin a few months back. Two coats are suggested.

Pre-finishing would require masking off the ends of the louvers, which would be laborious.

Does anyone know this stain? Comments and suggestions appreciated. The architect wants a quality product, but perhaps this stain is not the way to go for this project.


Click the link below to download the file included with this post.

Finish._Benjamin_Moore.pdf

12/5/22       #2: Shutter finishing ...
herb johnson

you are talking about a very viscous product at 4 mils wet, you hope would be is that it would be thixotropic meaning that it would shear or reduce in viscosity when put under shear, something like ketchup does, hvlp imho is not going to cut it frankly, my guess is that this product if you put a stir stick in it will stand straight up . i would be be looking for an aa unit at least of 15-1 ratio as 95 krebs units converts to greater than 54 seconds on a ford 4 cup.

good luck, herb j

12/6/22       #3: Shutter finishing ...
Mark B

I cant speak to that stain specifically but to add to what Herb said, when we have sprayed WB stains they behave more like paint than stain (solvent) and they dont flow out like you'd expect which is Im sure why they state back brushing/rolling. Not a great solution for shutters and louvers. I'd imagine a good option would be to get a sample of the material and when you see how much work it will be to apply, price the job through the roof due to the massive amount of labor and then price an alternative with a suitable solvent alternative that you are comfortable spraying and the powers that be will see the light.

12/7/22       #4: Shutter finishing ...
RichC

If you finish the louvers and the inside edge of the door, you can just mask off the entire area. Maybe even just drop in some cardboard to mask it off. Another method is to mask off the joinery and flat finish all the parts.


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