I seen a good number of post talking about stabilized wood and I would like to know what it is. Before coming to this site I have never heard about this. Thanks
...vacuum impregnated...
...Two-part process requires applying acrylic resins to a handle material followed by a curing period. The result is a water-resistant, harder-than-untreated wood that can be machined and drilled, and that can be polished to any finish you'd put on steel, from satin to a high gloss...
...vacuum impregnated...
Uhm sorry but wrong! Only the shade tree group does this to a very small limited subset of materials. The proper way is to use around 4,000 pounds of pressure.
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Your real answer is this.
...Two-part process requires applying acrylic resins to a handle material followed by a curing period. The result is a water-resistant, harder-than-untreated wood that can be machined and drilled, and that can be polished to any finish you'd put on steel, from satin to a high gloss...
Hmm...not going to get into this here but there are a lot more than just "shade tree groups" using vacuum. I will put my stabilized blanks up against anything anyone else has done. Yes, adding high pressure does indeed help on some material but I would not say, from 10 years of stabilizing experience, that pressure is the only proper way.
Uhm sorry but wrong! Only the shade tree group does this to a very small limited subset of materials. The proper way is to use around 4,000 pounds of pressure....vacuum impregnated...
Is there an advantage to simply do it to every (with the exception of trash wood blanks) pen blank? Would that be a detriment?
Elliott