My brother in law sprayed diesel fuel on regular 2×4's and 6'sthat were along the bottom of a cabin and porch he was building years ago and so far so good
I use the 50 50 diesel and used motor oil but roll it on with paint roller and pan........Goes on uniform and you can add the second coat in minutes.....Enjoy.
About used oil? Back on days that was what my father used on fence posts. But only for the part that goes in the ground. Roof tar works too, but used oil is cheaper.
When it's fresh it's definitely more flammable, but the hydrocarbons, the highly flammable stuff, evaporate pretty quickly leaving behind a gummy residue similar to varnish that dries pretty hard. It probably does effect it's combustibility, but I wouldn't suspect much or enough to not use this method. The alternative is the wood nearly dries out completely which also increases ease of ignition. Keep in mind, almost all wood finishes are petroleum based made from what's left over after refining fuels and oils. It's all highly combustible. I use old motor oil in a tin can to start my burn pile and it's not as easy to light as most would suspect. You're question isn't dumb, it seemed obvious at first but I ended up thinking it through for a while. Sorry I'm not better at being brief or concise with my scattered thoughts and utterances! Hopefully I either helped or sparked more questions.
@@CryptoJourneyKs I suppose it is ok to use new oil , it’s just a more expensive way to do it .. old car sump oil is what we used so it would be thinner and obviously black ..
Diluting it makes it easier for the board to absorb. Theres not a ton of options for what can be used for dilution, but Diesel is very similar and shares a lot of the same hydrocarbons so it homogenizes easily and consistently. It mostly evaporates as it dries and what's left behind stays bonded with the oil and should actually help thicken it and harden as it dries. It's all just to make the oil more viscous for ease of application is all. Straight oil works just as well, just takes longer to soak in and it can't be sprayed on, which is what I do.
Please help me understand why you say NOT to use synthetic oil. It is my understanding that synthetic starts as dinosaur oil. I may have heard wrong. What is it about synthetic that prevents it from preserving wood? Thank you for your helpful and informative videos.
I actually made this video when my father was alive and he pressed the issue that it had to be OIL… You’re right though, synthetic oil starts from crude so I don’t think its going to have any problems…
I think it would work, but maybe it gets dissolved by the oil underneath it, but i bet if it dries quick enough it would work, but i guess i could be wrong.
Thank you I was looking to see if someone asked this question! Yay im on it... we have plenty different wood eating insects that think my place is an all you can eat buffet!
Either, depending on your budget. Used oil, especially diesel has massive carbon particles which also add protection. We use new golden oil for wood that needs protection but will also show, like the wood in our greenhouses that we don't paint.
Oh yes, I’m a one man film crew, actor, and post production editor. Throughout the summer I’m so busy with ranch chores that by the time I come in after 18 hrs of hard work, I’m so exhausted that I can’t concentrate on post production. I do get some garden videos out throughout the summer but it tough. I have a ton of film in the can from this summer and winter time is when I cannot be out building and tending to nut trees so it’s when I can sit at the compter and put them altogether… This winter I’ll show you two High Tunnel greenhouses that I built, a sawmill that I designed and built that can take a 3 foot in diameter tree (in my opening video you’ll see the log truck delivering my logs), a jacuzzi, we drilled a water well, gardening videos, snow plowing, tree planting and some other instructional videos. Stay tuned, more is coming. Thanks for asking and watching. Capt Wingnut
So you use about 50% diesel fuel & 50% single grade motor oil? Can kerosine be used instead of diesel? And does the mixture need to be exactly that proportion? Thanks!
@@CaptainWingnut thank you I am new to homesteading. I have been studying for a few years, but I am about to start a project this summer and I am so happy & grateful to have found your Chanel. Peace and blessings to you and yours and all your endeavors
@@dissonant808 I'm definitely not an expert, so just spitballing here; But maybe make a small batch and test it's flammability. Just an oz. of each in a tin pan, in a safe location outside. Yes, gas is more easily ignited. But I'm thinking once mixed with oil, that may significantly reduce it's ignition point being that it's the gasoline vapors that are the actual combustible. Folks use mineral spirits, kerosene, etc. and those are quiet flammable. Cheap and easy to test what you have and know for sure. Something I want to look into is, and I know it sounds a bit goofy/oxymoronic, which "fuel" is cleanest to use and if one dries faster and/or dries harder than another. And does one dry better, leaving no residue to get on your hands, clothes, etc.
@@wingnutbert9685 Makes sense to me as a safe way to test ignition hazards. I too love to see different things tested to see how they perform and hold up over time, which is why I love @ProjectFarm videos. I do have ATF oil that's been sitting around not being used (could impart a nice "redwood" tone to the wood), some mineral spirits and think I saw some kerosene around here too, so maybe I'll try a small scale test on variations to your original recipe!
@@dissonant808 Project Farm is awesome! Good to have someone do real testing and not be a sponsored product schill. I've got a bridge to build with wind fallen Fir trees. It's a public trail that crosses a creek that runs through my property. I'm going to chainsaw two big beams and treads out of. It's a little ways from my house so trying to get something that's going to last with little to no maintenance. I'm on my own, so trying to plan construction and moving of the beams by myself and safely. Commercial products are mostly garbage and have to be redone every couple years. Motor oil and a fuel mix sounds bad on the face of it. But having to use the other "Low VOC" stuff so often, it's likely not any better environmentally and it insanely more expensive!
My brother in law sprayed diesel fuel on regular 2×4's and 6'sthat were along the bottom of a cabin and porch he was building years ago and so far so good
Blessing on you and yours for sharing your knowledge with all of us newbies. ty
I have done this and this works very well. Storm mountain Utah
Love it! Thank you Captain Wingnut... or Wingnut or.... whatever. ❤ Super channel, love your delivery and manner and loved the music.
Thank you kindly! That was uplifting to hear. Lots more coming... stay tuned.
I use the 50 50 diesel and used motor oil but roll it on with paint roller and pan........Goes on uniform and you can add the second coat in minutes.....Enjoy.
Great tip! We use brushes for the long stuff.
About used oil? Back on days that was what my father used on fence posts. But only for the part that goes in the ground. Roof tar works too, but used oil is cheaper.
Great video
Great idea, I’m going to try it on my old barn .
Is the diesel toxic for chickens that go in and out of the barn?
Love your tractor👍🏼
Might be a dumb question but does this make the wood more flammable/combustible? Thanks
When it's fresh it's definitely more flammable, but the hydrocarbons, the highly flammable stuff, evaporate pretty quickly leaving behind a gummy residue similar to varnish that dries pretty hard. It probably does effect it's combustibility, but I wouldn't suspect much or enough to not use this method. The alternative is the wood nearly dries out completely which also increases ease of ignition. Keep in mind, almost all wood finishes are petroleum based made from what's left over after refining fuels and oils. It's all highly combustible. I use old motor oil in a tin can to start my burn pile and it's not as easy to light as most would suspect. You're question isn't dumb, it seemed obvious at first but I ended up thinking it through for a while. Sorry I'm not better at being brief or concise with my scattered thoughts and utterances! Hopefully I either helped or sparked more questions.
What’s wrong with using only oil ? I did on a shed 50 years ago and it’s still being used today
what kind of oil please
@@sunshinesparkles4217 hi ….old used engine oil out of my car..after I did a oil change….no particular brand just used oil..
Is it ok to use new oil?
@@CryptoJourneyKs I suppose it is ok to use new oil , it’s just a more expensive way to do it .. old car sump oil is what we used so it would be thinner and obviously black ..
Diluting it makes it easier for the board to absorb. Theres not a ton of options for what can be used for dilution, but Diesel is very similar and shares a lot of the same hydrocarbons so it homogenizes easily and consistently. It mostly evaporates as it dries and what's left behind stays bonded with the oil and should actually help thicken it and harden as it dries. It's all just to make the oil more viscous for ease of application is all. Straight oil works just as well, just takes longer to soak in and it can't be sprayed on, which is what I do.
Thank you sir…I am making a wood preservative for my FEG 280 project
Please help me understand why you say NOT to use synthetic oil. It is my understanding that synthetic starts as dinosaur oil. I may have heard wrong. What is it about synthetic that prevents it from preserving wood? Thank you for your helpful and informative videos.
I actually made this video when my father was alive and he pressed the issue that it had to be OIL… You’re right though, synthetic oil starts from crude so I don’t think its going to have any problems…
@@CaptainWingnut ~Soak the Ends Well !! Yee Haw
Considering synthetic is 3-4x the cost 🤔
@@imjaspr it is, but used, after vehicle oil changes, it's "free" :)
boy math 😂
It appeared that you didn’t treat the ends of the wood. Is this not necessary, or did you do it off-camera?
I end up cutting to size and treat then.
After you treat wood like this, can you use paint over it?
I think it would work, but maybe it gets dissolved by the oil underneath it, but i bet if it dries quick enough it would work, but i guess i could be wrong.
I have lived 50yrs in florida not the treated wood from bigbox stores is not like it was yrs ago it last maybe 5 yrs
Oil based paint is all I'd risk trying over oil saturated wood.
Can you stain them after they dry or the oil and diesel is it?
I’d stain first or add stain to the mixture.
Thank you 🙏🙏🙏
Does it protect against insects like ants and termites?
Yes
Thank you I was looking to see if someone asked this question! Yay im on it... we have plenty different wood eating insects that think my place is an all you can eat buffet!
2 questions, Does that make it more flammable as the years go on? And is it hard to paint after that
Yeah, I was wondering about embers with more & more wild fires.
Does it have to be new oil can you uses used oil
Either, depending on your budget. Used oil, especially diesel has massive carbon particles which also add protection.
We use new golden oil for wood that needs protection but will also show, like the wood in our greenhouses that we don't paint.
Is this the same method you used as a kid
My grandfather used 90 weight gear oil diluted with diesel.
@@CaptainWingnut ... Does it cost more is that why your not doing it that way
If you put any of the stuff below ground yet to see how it holds up? Thanks.
Early in the video he said he helped bury posts 40-50 years ago, and they're still in good shape.
Thank you.
Thank You Sir.
how long does it smell
Awful the first day, less the second, then it's hardly noticeable.
Maybe filter the used oil through fine screen, less black? make use of something already used?
The black carbon is part of the preservative.
Are you still making videos? New subscriber here.
Oh yes, I’m a one man film crew, actor, and post production editor.
Throughout the summer I’m so busy with ranch chores that by the time I come in after 18 hrs of hard work, I’m so exhausted that I can’t concentrate on post production.
I do get some garden videos out throughout the summer but it tough.
I have a ton of film in the can from this summer and winter time is when I cannot be out building and tending to nut trees so it’s when I can sit at the compter and put them altogether…
This winter I’ll show you two High Tunnel greenhouses that I built, a sawmill that I designed and built that can take a 3 foot in diameter tree (in my opening video you’ll see the log truck delivering my logs), a jacuzzi, we drilled a water well, gardening videos, snow plowing, tree planting and some other instructional videos.
Stay tuned, more is coming.
Thanks for asking and watching.
Capt Wingnut
Farm boys are using used motor oil, I guess depends on application
Do you use car diesel or tractor diesel?
It's car diesel, tractor is dyed lol
So you use about 50% diesel fuel & 50% single grade motor oil? Can kerosine be used instead of diesel? And does the mixture need to be exactly that proportion? Thanks!
50/50 is just to thin the oil so it soaks in faster. Kerosene is just higher quality diesel. It works too.
@@CaptainWingnut thank you I am new to homesteading. I have been studying for a few years, but I am about to start a project this summer and I am so happy & grateful to have found your Chanel. Peace and blessings to you and yours and all your endeavors
Thanks for asking I was wondering that as well
thats the extra deep varnish.
Wont it smell bad?
Doesn't smell at all...well no more than a telephone pole smells.
👍
Know which is better?- pine or spruce.
Can you use ethanol free 87 gasoline? I don't have any use for diesel but keep gas cans for yard tools
Do not use gasoline. It's far too flammable. Diesel fuel has a much lower flash point.
@@toddwheeler1526 good point, shoulda thought of that!
@@dissonant808 I'm definitely not an expert, so just spitballing here; But maybe make a small batch and test it's flammability. Just an oz. of each in a tin pan, in a safe location outside. Yes, gas is more easily ignited. But I'm thinking once mixed with oil, that may significantly reduce it's ignition point being that it's the gasoline vapors that are the actual combustible. Folks use mineral spirits, kerosene, etc. and those are quiet flammable. Cheap and easy to test what you have and know for sure. Something I want to look into is, and I know it sounds a bit goofy/oxymoronic, which "fuel" is cleanest to use and if one dries faster and/or dries harder than another. And does one dry better, leaving no residue to get on your hands, clothes, etc.
@@wingnutbert9685 Makes sense to me as a safe way to test ignition hazards. I too love to see different things tested to see how they perform and hold up over time, which is why I love @ProjectFarm videos. I do have ATF oil that's been sitting around not being used (could impart a nice "redwood" tone to the wood), some mineral spirits and think I saw some kerosene around here too, so maybe I'll try a small scale test on variations to your original recipe!
@@dissonant808 Project Farm is awesome! Good to have someone do real testing and not be a sponsored product schill. I've got a bridge to build with wind fallen Fir trees. It's a public trail that crosses a creek that runs through my property. I'm going to chainsaw two big beams and treads out of. It's a little ways from my house so trying to get something that's going to last with little to no maintenance. I'm on my own, so trying to plan construction and moving of the beams by myself and safely. Commercial products are mostly garbage and have to be redone every couple years. Motor oil and a fuel mix sounds bad on the face of it. But having to use the other "Low VOC" stuff so often, it's likely not any better environmentally and it insanely more expensive!
Lose the music!!
good job man😀😀😀😀😀😀
👏