Hassui Ceramic - the FUTURE of woodturning finishes?
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- Опубліковано 6 жов 2024
- This video is a must-watch for woodturners looking for the ultimate finish. Hassui Ceramic is a revolutionary product that provides unmatched durability and a stunning high-gloss finish. We'll cover everything you need to know about Hassui Ceramic, from its unique properties to application tips and techniques. Discover why Hassui Ceramic may be the perfect finish for your woodturning projects, whether you're a beginner or a seasoned pro.
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@jarroddahl
Been using this a few years now, very impressed with it, insane at 1500 lightly between coats, it’s extremely easy to get back to bare wood, although it is soake in pretty far so that’s just my weird mind, not sure if you mentioned it but you might have forgotten the most important selling point! It’s food safe and temperature resistant! I’ve been using it on coffee cups for ages! It’s also a good little wood stabiliser due to how thin it is, low heat can help, put things in windows where the sun hits to help it cure, it can pool if you go too heavy on the last coat and you will get that layering issue, but think about this as your slowly building an extremely thin layer of glass, go too thick or heavy on one layer and every layer after will potentially come off. It’s fantastic on intricate carvings btw. Although to me it’s only really good purpose is to use on food contact items that will be in contact with hot food. Bowls, cups etc. I think there’s better finishing for wood carvings and other things like that, it’s a great choice for pale woods too as there zero discolouration. I’ll finished a cup recently where i buffed it to a high gloss finish. Looked great! I wouldn’t put it over anything oil based.. but I have painted over it on the outside of bowls. Again came up great!
Very good demonstration. Thanks!
Thanks for watching!
Thanks for watching!
Nice one, looking forward to the follow up tests. Been using it a little bit lately and have been pleased with the results but haven't really stress tested it.
Thanks for watching! I think that the key pieces of info are: it's expensive, it does really well with a little water, and it is not completely waterproof
Hello from reddit. I'd try it once.
Hey, thanks for making it over - I appreciate it!
Tnx for the demo
My pleasure, thanks for watching!
personally will never use a finish that takes this much work (i hate sanding and rarely go past 320), but appreciate the demo.
I am also pretty resistant to complicated finishes - I do think this one is good for a couple pieces a year though
Thank you for the video.
As this is a new product for you, you may not be an able to answer these question but…
Can this go over other finishes?
Could you use some sort of sanding sealer to limit the amount of ceramic required?
You are asking fabulous questions that I don't, unfortunately, have the answer to. I think that the sealer path would defeat the purpose, as the idea is to create a watertight finish. Creating gaps in that finish would probably lessen the waterproofing. I'd imagine that this could go over a drying oil once the oil is fully cured, but I'd have to test for myself to be sure. The question worth asking is why one would spend all the time to do a drying oil, THEN do this finish?
Thanks for watching!
Looks like it would be good for firearm stocks, especially highly figured.
Furniture and firearms, absolutely 👍 thanks for watching!
Would be interesting to know how many millilitres or fluid ounces you needed in total.. ie how many projects will a bottle do? Hmm, seems as I live in Canada I can’t get it anyway.. no international shipping
The distributor says about 1oz per square foot for 3 full coats. I used a little bit less, but that should give you some ideas of surface area. If we're talking bowls, if you're careful and don't waste, the 4oz sample should do a couple decently-sized bowls
@@qbranchwoodworks thanks, seems the distributor doesn’t ship to Canada .. look like a interesting product.
is it food safe?
It is not FDA approved, but it has the approval of the Japanese equivalent of the FDA
sounds like WatherGlass with IPA as a tinner
What is that? I can't find any info online and I'd love to learn more
@@qbranchwoodworks water glass can be purchased in most hardware stores. It is stone dissolved in caustic soda
@@willyjensen8595doesn’t sound very good safe