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log cabin

Responding to an article about making home made wood preservative,  Michael Dutton, Managing Director Company Secretary, Designer and Log Smith of the Tsarina Imperial Dacha Co Ltd of Scotland, has provided invaluable information as to the preservation of timers.  We would like to thank Michael for the tremendous information that he has provided.  Please visit Michael’s website as he provides a wealth of information and their services regarding handcrafted custom log structures.

Michael has also made himself available via Skype with the user name RasputinScotland.

I have a log building business in Scotland, UK and have been reading your articles on the use of Borates. We only use borates for the preservation of our logs. All logs are pre-treated with a 20% (10% Boric Acid and 10% Borax) by weight ratio with water onto our freshly processed timber whilst the moisture content is still very high. The water acts as the carrier for the borates which are then transported deep into the timber. One added benefit of the use of the borates is that they also act as a flame retardant.

Once we get to the jointing stage of our logs, usually after several weeks of processing the logs (we machine round our logs) we then carry out a sealing process which can also be used on dried timber. This involves a mixture of cold pressed linseed oil and gum turpentine (the real stuff, not the petroleum imitation turpentine). We add a 2% (1% Borax and 1% Boric Acid) by weight ratio mix of the borates and apply to the timber.

It takes around 24 to 48 hours to dry but gives a matt gloss finish and moisturises the timber. This mixture also helps to reduce checking of the logs whilst also carrying out its other functions as an insecticide, anti fungal and flame retardant. The oil’s main funtion is to act as the carrier for the borates to deliver them into the dry timber, and when the oil reaches a moist arear of the timber the borates are then tranferred over to the water to continue the transport process. This method is one of the most efficient of all methods of timber preservation and best of all it is non-toxic, environmentally friendly and uses totally natural raw materials.

Retreatment is normally required after 10 to 12 years, although intermittent touch up is also a good thing. Points to note when calculating weights of the liquids involved is that the weights will vary depending on the liquid and their specific gravity. To help i have listed them as follows using water as the reference weight;

1 Liter water = 1 kilogram
1 Liter Linseed Oil = 0.93 kilogram
1 Liter Gum Turpentine = 0.87 kilogram

Mixing is then just a simple matter of maths

Remember never to store your raw linseed oil in sunlight otherwise it will become stand oil which is thicker and does not carry the borates as effectivley as cold pressed linseed oil. Linseed oil also darkens over time.

Tung Oil rather than linseed oil in the same mixtures can also be used as has been traditionally used by the Chinese for centuries in timber preservation, however one has to be careful as it is made from nuts, and should you have a visitor who suffers from nut allergies you could inadvertantly activate their allergy. As the oil is also a water barrier, your logs are protected from the rain, coupled with the borates you have a fully protected log that with care and maintenance should help keep your log home preserved for generations.

I hope this information is useful to you, and should anyone wish to contact me i can be reached on skype with the user name of rasputinscotland.

Regards

Michael Dutton

If you are planning to build or perhaps restore a log or timber structure in the UK Please contact Michael.

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In the last installment I had beat the crap out of a copper sink to customize it for the new bathroom. Now that I had sufficiently distorted the sink to my liking it was time to turn my attention to custom faucets.

Sonoma Forge Waterbridge Sink FaucetI wanted something completely different. Throughout the lodge – being that this is a log home a great deal of the plumbing is exposed as there are few inner wall spaces to hide supply lines. The copper piping adds a bit of rustic and rather raw interest to the overall picture. With that in mind I wanted both the faucets at the bath sink and the shower system to be exposed. I didn’t want it to be too refined like that of manufactured fixtures on the market.

I searched numerous manufacturers to find just the right look — however everything to me seemed too provincial or too finished until I came across the rustic and raw plumbing fixtures of Sonoma Forge.

This is what I had been seeking. They had two different lines that I liked however, one called Waterbridge which capitalized on the look of exposed copper plumbing seemed to really fit in with the feel of the new bath.

[click to continue…]

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Remodeling a Small Bathroom in a Log Home Part 9: Preparing the Floor

It was now time to prepare the floor not only for the tile, for which I still search, but so that I can place the superstructure for the copper tub which was built in the last installment.
Laying the floor was actually quite simple. Long ago I had removed the ugly pink tile left over from [...]

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Remodeling a Small Bathroom in a Log Home Part 8: Building the Bathtub

It is now time to turn my attention to building the first part of my copper tub: the wood support. In the last post in this series I had finished up rewiring some old antique elk antler lights.
Although I have made some small things out of copper including a counter top and sink for [...]

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Resource for Boric Acid

In many previous posts I discuss the use of boric acid during the process of replacing chinking, repairing logs and have identified several other uses where borates should be used as well as methods of application.
Boric acid works well as a wood preservative — it kills mold, mildew as well insects and is very useful [...]

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Remodeling a Small Bathroom in a Log Home Part 4: Cleaning Logs

Now that the weather has warmed up work has resumed on the remodeling of the small bath and shower installation. Previously we had demolished the old bathroom.
The two stick frame walls have been insulated and covered in a plastic vapor barrier. The log wall shown here in the first photo has not seen the [...]

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Log Home Decorating: Creating a Personal Space

It is important in any home to be able to create a special place for when you want solitude.
Sometimes you just need a place to kick back and read in a place where you can get away from it all.
Here it is all about simplicity. A comfortable wingback chair, a comfortable throw in warm [...]

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A Kitchen Cupboard Reborn: Saved from the Ashes

For years it had sat in boxes and crates in the recesses of a storage area in the barn back in Illinois. As a kid I remember many times having to move it here or there with instructions to keep the boxes together when ever that part of the barn was ‘reorganized’.
Each box had a [...]

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Remodeling a Small Bathroom in a Log Home Part 2: Designing a Copper Bathtub

The shower attached to the small bathroom, as discussed in the previous installment, has been removed and the space opened up to its original 6 by 6 space.
The narrow door as seen in this photo is only 19 inches wide and leads to the bathroom. The walls have been stripped of the cheesy press-board [...]

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Making a Rustic Pot Rack for a Log Home Kitchen

Ineeded a pot rack here at the lodge. I couldn’t have one hanging overhead with cathedral ceilings in the kitchen and even if I could I didn’t want to interrupt the space.
I use my copper pots and pans. What is the point of having them if you don’t use them?
I have seen iron pot racks, [...]

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