Ok this is a totally subjective test that is basically comparing apples to oranges, i.e. one coat of woodtux vs. 2 coats of timberoil done 6 weeks apart; the woodtux finish is months older than the timberoil; and the list goes on and on. But all that aside, timberoil beads water so incredibly even 2 months after the second application - where as I went back to do some interior painting for a customer that I had refinished their deck with wtw this summer - and I looked at it after a rain - and it wasn't beading water at all. I will be curious to see how the timberoil finish survives the winter and what kind of maintenance it will need next year. I still have no intention of bringing timber oil to my customers - until I see a niche for it - or a customer demands it. Although I am seeing it's application to decks adjacent to chlorinated pools - where any finish is totally killed - and something like timber oil would always blend back in without looking splotchy.
Ok this is a totally subjective test that is basically comparing apples to oranges, i.e. one coat of woodtux vs. 2 coats of timberoil done 6 weeks apart; the woodtux finish is months older than the timberoil; and the list goes on and on. But all that aside, timberoil beads water so incredibly even 2 months after the second application - where as I went back to do some interior painting for a customer that I had refinished their deck with wtw this summer - and I looked at it after a rain - and it wasn't beading water at all. I will be curious to see how the timberoil finish survives the winter and what kind of maintenance it will need next year. I still have no intention of bringing timber oil to my customers - until I see a niche for it - or a customer demands it. Although I am seeing it's application to decks adjacent to chlorinated pools - where any finish is totally killed - and something like timber oil would always blend back in without looking splotchy.
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