Cutting Shellac for sealing
I recall a post that mentioned a certain type of alcohol for cutting shellac, but have not been able to find the thread. I believe it mentioned that denatured alcohol could have finish issues from contamination. If anyone could let me know what the brand was (it was apparently drinkable but tasted awful) I would appreciate it.
How much should I cut the shellac for a sealer coat?
Re: Cutting Shellac for sealing
Any ultra high proof ethanol, like Everclear or Spiritus, will work. be careful, it is very flammable.
Re: Cutting Shellac for sealing
I think you are referring to a post of mine. I can't buy 190 proof Everclear in California. If you can get that, it's fine. I bought pure ethanol from Quality Chemical [Amazon] which is denatured only with a bittering agent to make it undrinkable, hence legal in CA.
Re: Cutting Shellac for sealing
Thanks, Everclear was what I remember. I believe it was your post Greg. As luck would have it the local wine store carries it.
Re: Cutting Shellac for sealing
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Greg Mirken
I think you are referring to a post of mine. I can't buy 190 proof Everclear in California. If you can get that, it's fine. I bought pure ethanol from Quality Chemical [Amazon] which is denatured only with a bittering agent to make it undrinkable, hence legal in CA.
I'm in EU, but I guess if you look around you'll find supply of absolute (anhydrous) ethanol with just tiny amount of the bittering agent added. What I use is sold as fuel for ventless fireplaces (I guess they are illegal in CA, too) but it has many other technical uses (degreasing etc.). Just read MSDS for ethanol content - should be above 90%, above 95% is better mine is 99.9+% which works absolutely great - everclear doesn't compare.
Re: Cutting Shellac for sealing
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Nevin
Any ultra high proof ethanol, like Everclear or Spiritus, will work. be careful, it is very flammable.
Spiritus, as spelled, is denatured. Spirytus is plain ethanol. Dangerously close names. In the mostly lawless US, there are no restrictions on the toxicity of denatured alcohols. Anything can be the denaturant. Europe is significantly more intelligent in this area.
Now that I’ve looked at a few MSDSs, I think I’m doing no more french polishing with denatured that can be 60% methanol.
I don’t know which denaturant causes the finish problems, but I do know straight ethanol on a pad isn’t going to kill me.
Re: Cutting Shellac for sealing
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Richard500
Spiritus, as spelled, is denatured. Spirytus is plain ethanol. Dangerously close names. In the mostly lawless US, there are no restrictions on the toxicity of denatured alcohols. Anything can be the denaturant. Europe is significantly more intelligent in this area.
Now that I’ve looked at a few MSDSs, I think I’m doing no more french polishing with denatured that can be 60% methanol.
I don’t know which denaturant causes the finish problems, but I do know straight ethanol on a pad isn’t going to kill me.
Spiritus is latin word for distilate, Spirytus (or spyrytus) is (I believe) Polish brand of ethanol products. None of the words is reserved for anything exact.
I wouldn't use denatured with methanol for french polishing. It can get into body via hands and breathing (you will be sitting for long hours at FP job). Here in EU methanol is generally not used, typically bitrex and MEK in tiny quantities, sometimes gasoline for lower grades.
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Re: Cutting Shellac for sealing
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Seems to be a brand name, somewhere, and is denatured.
Re: Cutting Shellac for sealing
I picked up a bottle of everclear. It is available at local licquor stores. What would be a good cut for sealing an instrument?