Evening all,
Here is my project that I've just started, a 135 year old railway carriage!
She's looks like age, and I intend (so far as I can) to take her back to gleaming like she would have been in the days of our great Queen Empress Victoria!
Needless to say, it'll take a while....new skills need to be learned, some advice given from you guys, a few swollen thumbs, temper tantrums, a few quid (a couple should I say) and some long hours!
My first day at it was yesterday, and all of the the time I spent (was meant to spend) planning was spent drinking, so here I am on the forum looking for some advice as I go along this (steam) journey.
I started off yesterday as you will see from the album removing obvious rotten wood from one side. A lot of the timber is still quite sound around the windows, which is mainly teak.
I'd be write in thinking that where rot is occurring to a small degree, I should go back to reasonably solid wood, then apply hardener, then apply filler - correct???
i have uploaded a couple of pictures into an album in my profile to show the scale of what I'm doing.
Cheers for now!
Mark
Here is my project that I've just started, a 135 year old railway carriage!
She's looks like age, and I intend (so far as I can) to take her back to gleaming like she would have been in the days of our great Queen Empress Victoria!
Needless to say, it'll take a while....new skills need to be learned, some advice given from you guys, a few swollen thumbs, temper tantrums, a few quid (a couple should I say) and some long hours!
My first day at it was yesterday, and all of the the time I spent (was meant to spend) planning was spent drinking, so here I am on the forum looking for some advice as I go along this (steam) journey.
I started off yesterday as you will see from the album removing obvious rotten wood from one side. A lot of the timber is still quite sound around the windows, which is mainly teak.
I'd be write in thinking that where rot is occurring to a small degree, I should go back to reasonably solid wood, then apply hardener, then apply filler - correct???
i have uploaded a couple of pictures into an album in my profile to show the scale of what I'm doing.
Cheers for now!
Mark