Used this on my kitchen ceiling - it's awful. Flashed through 3 coats of my matt emulsion on my ceiling. Cover Stain has never let me down, and it does not flash through my top coats.
I still keep cover stain. This BIN Aqua is good as the stain comes through but it holds it in suspension and draws it out but once cured the topcoat does cover
I heard about this last year I was in the merchant and the zinnser rep was there telling me about it, so far though I've heard it's not as good as it should be, watching your video though it's clear it's really good. I picked the usual 123+ instead the last time I was at the merchant just in case what I heard was true, cause I'd like to be totally water based also I hate using solvent it's just such a pain. Let's hope they keep getting better so we don't have to use oil again! What's your opinion is the new aqua better than the 123+?. Thanks for the video's great as usual.
So far so good where I've used it Dan. Feedback from customers has been positive and no knot bleed as yet..... R.e. Brush mates, unfortunately they don't seem to work anymore. I went into mine last week to grab a brush for some reason and they've all gone off. The pad is still full of fluid so my guess is the acrylic pigments they're putting in oil paint these days, not worth bothering with oil based anymore with the advances in w/b. Good vid mate. 👍
if your using oil based paint you want to order from palatine paints they still make pre 2010 oil based paints a lot more durable and glosses etc stay white for years and colours dry quick and harden a lot quicker and pigment won't off in water. post 2010 oil based tints are rubbish they take about 3 months to fully harden and the pigment washes off in water and ain't anyway near as durable. palatines 2 hours industrial gloss is the hardest wearing paint ive ever seen satin and gloss msp oil paints much better than water based msp
@jackwardley3626 Thank you Jack, I'll look into that. I do miss using O/B, I did my parents bungalow back in about '07/'08 and used Leyland Oil Satin (used to swear by Leyland) on all the woodwork. It was still lovely and brilliant white when they moved out last year. The only w/b I've found that comes close to oil is the Caparol Haftprimer which denibs like an old fashioned oil undercoat and Benjamin Moore for topcoats. Having said that, I'm used to the w/b now and I do like the soap and water clean up but they're going to stop us from doing that in the next few years, you mark my words! The new "oil" coatings wash out in water because of the acrylic pigments in them. It's a massive con. Cheers buddy 👍
@@PBYM79 Alright mate. don't use leyland oil satinwood now it yellows after 4-5 months not just a bit like proper magy but application is still one of the best. tinted oil paints now are next to unusable with taken 2-3 months to fully harden and stay tacky for like a week and the higher end water based are more durable than them but not the pre 2010 oils
@@PBYM79 Albany oil based satin is good found a tin in the garage been in there for like 5 years without uv still white on the tin if it can stay white that long without uv you won't need to worry about yellowing. dulux trade satin was proper yellow
Used this on my kitchen ceiling - it's awful. Flashed through 3 coats of my matt emulsion on my ceiling.
Cover Stain has never let me down, and it does not flash through my top coats.
I still keep cover stain. This BIN Aqua is good as the stain comes through but it holds it in suspension and draws it out but once cured the topcoat does cover
I heard about this last year I was in the merchant and the zinnser rep was there telling me about it, so far though I've heard it's not as good as it should be, watching your video though it's clear it's really good. I picked the usual 123+ instead the last time I was at the merchant just in case what I heard was true, cause I'd like to be totally water based also I hate using solvent it's just such a pain. Let's hope they keep getting better so we don't have to use oil again! What's your opinion is the new aqua better than the 123+?. Thanks for the video's great as usual.
Cheers mate. Yes I'm a total convert and this did the the job and dried as I'm putting it on. No more Brushkeep and expensive refill liquid
So far so good where I've used it Dan. Feedback from customers has been positive and no knot bleed as yet.....
R.e. Brush mates, unfortunately they don't seem to work anymore. I went into mine last week to grab a brush for some reason and they've all gone off. The pad is still full of fluid so my guess is the acrylic pigments they're putting in oil paint these days, not worth bothering with oil based anymore with the advances in w/b. Good vid mate. 👍
Bless you mate. Yes I'm all for going completely waterbased
if your using oil based paint you want to order from palatine paints they still make pre 2010 oil based paints a lot more durable and glosses etc stay white for years and colours dry quick and harden a lot quicker and pigment won't off in water. post 2010 oil based tints are rubbish they take about 3 months to fully harden and the pigment washes off in water and ain't anyway near as durable. palatines 2 hours industrial gloss is the hardest wearing paint ive ever seen satin and gloss msp oil paints much better than water based msp
@jackwardley3626 Thank you Jack, I'll look into that. I do miss using O/B, I did my parents bungalow back in about '07/'08 and used Leyland Oil Satin (used to swear by Leyland) on all the woodwork. It was still lovely and brilliant white when they moved out last year. The only w/b I've found that comes close to oil is the Caparol Haftprimer which denibs like an old fashioned oil undercoat and Benjamin Moore for topcoats. Having said that, I'm used to the w/b now and I do like the soap and water clean up but they're going to stop us from doing that in the next few years, you mark my words! The new "oil" coatings wash out in water because of the acrylic pigments in them. It's a massive con. Cheers buddy 👍
@@PBYM79 Alright mate. don't use leyland oil satinwood now it yellows after 4-5 months not just a bit like proper magy but application is still one of the best. tinted oil paints now are next to unusable with taken 2-3 months to fully harden and stay tacky for like a week and the higher end water based are more durable than them but not the pre 2010 oils
@@PBYM79 Albany oil based satin is good found a tin in the garage been in there for like 5 years without uv still white on the tin if it can stay white that long without uv you won't need to worry about yellowing. dulux trade satin was proper yellow
Brilliant Gear
Nice one mate
Bendec is cheaper
My mate did a scratch test on Bedec All Prime and it let him down big time. This is more but worth every penny
@@danielnugentpainteranddeco557 really. I was never really happy with bin blue felt it always needed two coats. What about haf prime used that?