I'm trying to decide which aerosol lacquer to use to finish my Bones pipe. I'm looking at Mohawk or Deft. Looking for long service life and toughness. Any concensus?
Nitrocellulose lacquer is the opposite of those things, as well as being flammable.I'm trying to decide which aerosol lacquer to use to finish my Bones pipe. I'm looking at Mohawk or Deft. Looking for long service life and toughness. Any concensus?
Deft is a good consumer product, but furniture touch-up technicians use Mohawk. I've used both - deft seems to have a thicker single coat while Mohawk is by design a thinner coat (allowing "corrections" to be made between coats).I'm trying to decide which aerosol lacquer to use to finish my Bones pipe. I'm looking at Mohawk or Deft. Looking for long service life and toughness. Any concensus?
Which model Marxmann is this one, Briar?
Too abrasive. It can destroy nomenclature and stem logos.No finsh compares with Tripoli polishing.
Exactly this. You bought an unfinished pipe and it should remain so. It is yours so do what you want but unfinished pipes age really well. If you want a bit of shine, nose oil will do well for that.None. Zero. Nada. Keep that puppy clean and let it age naturally.
I am a retired pensioner, time is what I got plenty of.Whether you use lacquer or shellac, the finish will have to be maintained over time. It’s not quite as durable as a polyurethane finish.
I prefer shellac myself. It’s easily maintained. I dissolve shellac flakes to achieve a light cut and just wipe it on the surfaces of the stummel. Once dried I polish on a wheel.
Just wax it. If it gets dirty you can use soap and water on it and re-wax it.
Too abrasive. It can destroy nomenclature and stem logos.
