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just been no slingshot forum and the was someone useing linseed oil he put the catty in a bad with the oil and left it 3 hours is this a good way to use linseed

Well there is no wrong way or right way to add oil to woods some woods soak more oils up .. True Oil is a sticky expensive waste of time and is more like a varnish ,, Danish oil works good too and tung oil,I've even french polished a catty ,, No one will ever agree on which is best ,, But you dont want it too shinny or slippy or you will lose grip ,, Some use lacquer spay over paint. :bad: ) atb mick :thumbs:

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just been no slingshot forum and the was someone useing linseed oil he put the catty in a bad with the oil and left it 3 hours is this a good way to use linseed

Well there is no wrong way or right way to add oil to woods some woods soak more oils up .. True Oil is a sticky expensive waste of time and is more like a varnish ,, Danish oil works good too and tung oil,I've even french polished a catty ,, No one will ever agree on which is best ,, But you dont want it too shinny or slippy or you will lose grip ,, Some use lacquer spay over paint. :bad: ) atb mick :thumbs:

Agreed! Tru Oil doesn't give a good enough protection, it just gives a shiny appearance. While oils like danish and tung oil are good because they penetrate the surface of the wood and soak into he pores they still don't offer much in the way of surface protection. Some people like yacht varnish and polyurethanes, personally I would only use an oil based poly if I had to. The best stuff I have found is hard wax oil because it's microporous and it's water, scratch, dirt and UV resistant. It also retains the nice texture of the wood without giving it that plastic feel you get with poly's.

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just been no slingshot forum and the was someone useing linseed oil he put the catty in a bad with the oil and left it 3 hours is this a good way to use linseed

If you soak them like that mate they get saturated and can weep/sweat oil out for ages,could be alright with some harder type wood, but i wouldnt risk it :hmm:

 

I make the odd natural cattys, and walkingsticks, i use "Ronseal hardwood garden furniture oil" from B&Q about £10 for 500ml, sounds expensive but it goes a long way, it soaks in timber and leaves a bit of a sheen on the surface, i just coat cattys/sticks a couple of times, leave to dry overnight and give them a wipe with a dry cloth, dead easy and very weatherproof :thumbs:

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