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Workbench Top - What Oil

ddurrett896

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Mar 29, 2015
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995
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VA
Just build a workbench top out of Red Oak and want to protect with an oil. It's going to get messy greasy in the future, coated in everything from paint to oil and carb cleaner.

Read about oils and it looks like I can use Tung Oil, Linseed oil, Teak oil or Danish oil is my best bet. What's my best option? Thanks!
 
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mxdev

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Aug 28, 2019
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SW Ontario
Danish oil is just a mix of Poly, Mineral Spirits and Linseed or Tung oil. Similar effects can be achieved by making your own, or changing the process.

Red oak is extremely porous, and will absorb any liquids that come into contact with it unless it's sealed, and it can leach and squeeze back out onto other projects and contaminate them. It can ruin the finish on any woodworking project for example.

My vote would be apply a few coats of linseed oil, then finish it with a few coats of poly to keep solvents and oil from leaching in. The "bowling alley" poly I applied to my bench has held up to a lot of abuse, and cleans easily.
 
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Jackfre

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Dec 26, 2010
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I don't want a slick top on a woodworking bench. I have one done with Daleys SharkFin oil. No real protection but a nice look. A work table I recently built was done with a couple coats of Boiled Linseed Oil. Essentially both are sealers. I think the BLO best of the two.
 

SGKent

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Feb 12, 2010
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Citrus Heights CA
Worked as a machinist and built engines for a living for several years. That red oak will get beat to hell even with a very hard coating on it. You will want a stainless steel top for oils and engines, and it will be full of dents and scratches when you are done. I keep a disposable Masonite top on mine. It you must have wood, get thin layer of your oak to put on top, so you can remove and replace it when it becomes unsightly.
 

jimreed2160

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Aug 7, 2016
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Tallahassee FL
I covered my beater bench with cheap laminate flooring. A $20 pack should be more than enough for a few changes. I treat my beech woodworking bench with a 75/25 mix of turps / BLO. Too much blo will turn wood black over time.
 

Bretny

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Jul 31, 2017
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Dutchess county NY
Just soak motor oil into it. Tung oil is nice stuff and i have it on my living room floor. Not really much point in useing what is realy a foodgrade furnature finish on a work bench.

Yes red oak seams like it will be good for a top but usualy the grain isnt that tight so can chip and splinter easily.
 
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