Originally posted by BobbyMike
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M37 Wooden Bed
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My only experience has been through my father-in-law, who is real particular. He was having to apply it annually to his deck.
Location is such that it gets lots of sun during the summer, is wet during spring/fall and usually is covered by ice and snow all winter.
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Thompson's was always the best, but I must admit that I have not used it since the latest EPA mandated re-formula. Like everything else that is now water based, the performance is worse than when we could apply oil based, radioactive, lead paints that really worked......
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Originally posted by MoparNorm View PostThompson's was always the best, but I must admit that I have not used it since the latest EPA mandated re-formula. Like everything else that is now water based, the performance is worse than when we could apply oil based, radioactive, lead paints that really worked......
Water based water repellant...makes plenty of sense to me. By the way, I'm leading a revolution to overthrow the EPA, anyone want to sign up?
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Sickcall
Originally posted by Sickcall View PostIt doesn't matter what clear sealer you use as anyone of them will only last a year. Just read an article today in Popular Mechanics about this same subject. It would have to have UV inhibitors in it or some color like a stain to last longer.
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About five years ago I put a new wood bed in my 72 chevy. I just milled 1X sugar pine from local lumber yard. I went cheap and did not even use clear but I did hand sort the boards. I milled it very close, bolted it very tight, and sealed it very well. The end result was when parked down hill it ponded water in the bed and did not drain!
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My first Power Wagon, a truck that I acquired in 1973, had a replacement bed floor in it. Actually, that floor is still in it. The floor was made of plywood covered with a full-floor piece of sheetmetal.
You could even use treated plywood, and use two layers of 3/4 inch. A nice thing about wood, however, is that it is not so slippery as a metal deck. The sheetmetal over plywood bed floor is pretty quiet, however, unlike plate.
I did drill drain holes in it.Power Wagon Advertiser monthly magazine, editor & publisher.
Why is it that the inside of old truck cabs smell so good?
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Be aware that when you drilled the holes into the sheet metal, you most likely also drilled into the plywood? Water that goes into the drain holes could also run into the plywood, eventually rotting that area and the adjacent area between the metal and the wood.
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Originally posted by MoparNorm View PostMarine grade plywood would probably be fine, but at $90 a sheet, you could almost buy the white oak.....
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