Home Page link

Filler For Cracked/Rotted Wood - Mr Mack's Wood Fix Equivalent

Home Repair - - If it ain't broken, don't fix it. Otherwise look here. 

Bookmark this page:  YahooMyWeb Yahoo!  Google Google  Windows Live Favorites Windows Live  del.icio.us del.icio.us  digg digg  Add to Netscape Netscape
Subject Author Date
Filler For Cracked/Rotted Wood - Mr Mack's Wood Fix Equivalent abby 07-25-2008
If you were  Registered and logged in, you could reply and use other advanced thread options
Posted by abby on July 25, 2008, 3:32 pm


Hi,

We have some rotted and cracked exterior wood that needs
filling before re-staining the house. I had been using Mr. Mack's
Wood Fix for this but it is no longer made. Minwax wood
filler is OK for some filling but not all. Mr. Mack's could be
thinned to a near paint-like fluidity that would easily go into
small cracks and leave a protective coating on the wood.
Can you recommend another filler for that also does this?

Thanks,
Gary


Posted by David Nebenzahl on July 25, 2008, 3:45 pm


On 7/25/2008 12:32 PM abby spake thus:

> We have some rotted and cracked exterior wood that needs
> filling before re-staining the house. I had been using Mr. Mack's
> Wood Fix for this but it is no longer made. Minwax wood
> filler is OK for some filling but not all. Mr. Mack's could be
> thinned to a near paint-like fluidity that would easily go into
> small cracks and leave a protective coating on the wood.
> Can you recommend another filler for that also does this?

Dunno about that stuff, but what I'd recommend (and what has been
recommended by others with a lot more experience in this field than me)
are any of the epoxy-based wood fillers. They're all similar, 2-part
pastes that you mix before filling. Mix up to about the consistency of
peanut butter. They stick much better than anything else, are sandable
and paintable, and hold up to weather. (They might be a little harder
than the fillers you've been used to using, so you need to be a little
more careful finishing them off neatly before setting.)


--
"Wikipedia ... it reminds me ... of dogs barking idiotically through
endless nights. It is so bad that a sort of grandeur creeps into it.
It drags itself out of the dark abyss of pish, and crawls insanely up
the topmost pinnacle of posh. It is rumble and bumble. It is flap and
doodle. It is balder and dash."

- With apologies to H. L. Mencken

Posted by dpb on July 25, 2008, 6:16 pm


abby wrote:
...
> ... Mr. Mack's could be
> thinned to a near paint-like fluidity that would easily go into small
> cracks and leave a protective coating on the wood. Can you recommend
> another filler for that also does this?

Don't know that one by name but you could look at the "PC Woody" line
from PC Epoxy -- I've used the hardener that is a thin material as it
comes as well as their fillers. There are several others w/ similar
products.

http://www.pcepoxy.com/woodepoxy.asp

--

Posted by Mike Hennessey on July 25, 2008, 7:34 pm


wrote:

>Hi,
>
>We have some rotted and cracked exterior wood that needs
>filling before re-staining the house. I had been using Mr. Mack's
>Wood Fix for this but it is no longer made. Minwax wood
>filler is OK for some filling but not all. Mr. Mack's could be
>thinned to a near paint-like fluidity that would easily go into
>small cracks and leave a protective coating on the wood.
>Can you recommend another filler for that also does this?
>
>Thanks,
>Gary
>

I use a product called Git Rot. I buy it at a marine
supply store. It is very thin and penetrates the
rotted wood and turns it into a stone like substance.
It takes a day to cure.

Mike

Note: my return address contains no numeric characters

Posted by John Grabowski on July 25, 2008, 9:58 pm



> Hi,
>
> We have some rotted and cracked exterior wood that needs filling before
> re-staining the house. I had been using Mr. Mack's Wood Fix for this but
> it is no longer made. Minwax wood filler is OK for some filling but not
> all. Mr. Mack's could be
> thinned to a near paint-like fluidity that would easily go into small
> cracks and leave a protective coating on the wood. Can you recommend
> another filler for that also does this?


Minwax also has a wood hardener which is very thin and easily absorbs into
the wood. Use this before you use the filler.


Similar ThreadsPosted
Wood Filler For Exterior Wood Patching ? March 4, 2007, 1:37 pm
exterior wood filler February 25, 2006, 7:29 pm
Spackling vs. Wood Filler July 17, 2006, 10:06 am
Wood filler for around toilet February 22, 2007, 6:42 am
Insulation filler for hollow wood door? November 28, 2005, 6:42 pm
laminate floor question - wood filler? January 14, 2006, 10:29 pm
rotted sill +wood filler question:help please January 7, 2007, 7:57 pm
The 4th China International Wood and Wood Products Trade Conference. January 23, 2008, 10:00 pm
Decent wood stain that actually penetrates the wood??? May 11, 2008, 11:15 pm
Wood/Wood floor question March 3, 2008, 2:27 am

Contact Us | Privacy Policy

XML SitemapXML Sitemap