Friday, February 13 2004 @ 06:43 PM EST Contributed by: Dave Carnell Views: 21654
Once rot gets a toehold in wood it is difficult to cure completely---
it is like a cancer. Digging out the rotted wood will still leave
spores and water in the sound wood. After you fill in the cavity
with something like epoxy, the rot continues to flourish underneath.
Products promoted to make rotted wood sound and stop rot penetrate only
until they meet water, with which they do not mix. Under the solid
repair rotting goes on. With one exception (more later), the commercial
products sold to treat dry wood to prevent rot are completely ineffective
against established rot in wet wood because they are dissolved in petroleum
solvents and oil and water do not mix.
There are two commonly available inexpensive materials that will kill rot
in wood and prevent its recurrence. First, there are borates (borax-boric
acid mixtures) which have an established record in preventing rot in new
wood and in killing rot organisms and wood-destroying insects in infested
wood. Second, there is ethylene glycol, most readily available as
auto antifreeze-coolant. Glycol is toxic to the whole spectrum of
organisms from staphylococcus bacteria to mammals. All of the published
material on its effectiveness against wood-destroying fungi and insects
that I am aware of is the result of my investigations over the past 15
years.
Both borate solutions and glycol penetrate dry and wet wood well because
they are water-soluble; in fact, penetration by glycol is especially helped
by its extreme hygroscopicity-its strong attraction for water. For
both, the fact that they are water-soluble means they are not permanent
solutions to rot in wood that is contnually exposed to water-below the
waterline and in ground-where they will eventually be extracted-dissolved
out.
I first was interested in glycol as a wood-stabilizing agent, where it
is in many ways superior to polethylene glycol (PEG), and it was during
this work that I realized the useful effect of glycol on organisms,
though I was pretty dense in interpreting the first experiment.
The ladies immerse the stems of greenery such as magnolia branches in glycerin
to keep them green. Glycol is very similar to glycerin in all its
physical properties and much cheaper, so I stuck a magnolia branch in antifreeze.
The next day it was brown. After the third attempt I tumbled to the
fact that the glycol was killing the greenery.
This was the reason that glycol never replaced glycerin in applications such
as a humectant for tobacco and an ingredient of cosmetics and pharmaceutical
ointments, though it had all the desirable physical properties.
I had two 2" thick slabs of a 14" diameter hickory tree that had just been
cut. I treated one with antifreeze and left one untreated.
I was looking at wood stabilization, not rot prevention. After about
six months stored inside my shop the untreated control was not only cracked
apart, but it was sporting a great fungal growth, while the treated slab
was clean.
The local history museum wanted to exhibit two "turpentine trees", longleaf
pines that had many years ago been gashed to harvest the sap that made
everything from turpentine to pine tar. The trees delivered to us
after cutting were infested with various beetles and had some fungal growth.
I treated them with antifreeze outside under a plastic tarpaulin every
few days for three weeks. They were then free of insects and fungus
and have remained so after being moved inside and installed in an exhibit
over four years ago.
I took three pieces from a rotting dock float that were covered with a
heavy growth of fungus, lichens, etc. I treated one with antifreeze
painted on with a brush, the second with a water solution containing 23%
borates (as B2O3), and left the third untreated as a control. They
were left exposed outdoors and were rained on the first night. By
the next morning the growth on the antifreeze-treated piece was definitely
browning and the borate-treated piece showed slight browning. After
two months exposure to the weather the growth was dead on the antifreeze-
and borate-treated pieces and flourishing on the control.
I have a simple flat-bottomed skiff built of plywood and white pine, which
has little resistance to rot. After ten years some rot developed
in one of the frames. It may have begun in the exposed end
grain. It consumed the side frame, part of the bottom frame, and
part of a seat brace fastened to the side frame. The plywood
gusset joining the side frame to the bottom frame was not attacked.
I excised the rotted wood, saturated all with ethylene glycol antifreeze
to kill all the rot organisms, and there has been no further deterioration
in four more years afloat with wet bilges. I have not replaced any
pieces, as I am building another boat that can replace it; that is more
fun, anyway.
I have a 60+ year old case of the fungus infection known as "athlete's
foot". Many years ago it infected the toenails extensively.
The whole thing was pretty grotesque. My dermatologist and druggist
both assured me there is no known cure. About six years ago I started
using antifreeze applied under the nails with a medicine dropper about
every five days. The professionals are technically right.
I have not completely cured it, but the nails have grown out pink and
thinned almost to the ends and I never have any trouble with blistering,
peeling, or itching between the toes as I had had for six decades.
No drug company is going to have any interest in this because the information
has been in the public domain for so long that there is no opportunity
for any proprietary advantage. The various wood-rotting organisms
cannot be anywhere near as tough.
Glycol by itself has one big advantage over solutions of borates in either
water or glycol. Glycol pentrates rapidly through all paint,
varnish, and oil finishes (except epoxy and polyurethanes) without lifting
or damaging those finishes in any way. You can treat all of the wood
of your boat without removing any finish. The dyes in glycol antifreeze
are so weak that they do not discolor even white woods. Once
bare wood has been treated with glycol or the borate
solutions and become dry to the touch it can be finished or glued.
If a borate solution leaves white residues on the surface, it will have
to be washed off with water and the surface allowed to dry.
This is my preferred process to treat rot. Once you find soft
wood or other evidence of rot, soak it with antifreeze even if you cannot
do anything else at the moment. Paint it on or spray it on
with a coarse spray. Avoid fine mistlike spraying because it increases
the likelihood that you will breathe in unhealthy amounts of glycol.
Put it on surfaces well away from the really damaged wood, too.
Use glycol lavishly on the suspect wood, which will readily absorb 10-20%
of its weight of antifreeze.
Next dig out wood that is rotted enough to be weak. Add more glycol
to wet the exposed wood thoroughly. Then add the 25% borate solution
of the recipe below so long as it will soak in in no more than 2-3 hours.
Then fill in the void with epoxy putty and/or a piece of sound treated
wood as required. The reasons I use borates at all are: 1)
it is a belt-and-suspenders approach to a virulent attack, and 2) over
a long period glycol will evaporate from the wood; especially, in areas
exposed directly to the sun and the high temperatures that result.
If there is any question about water extracting the glycol or the borates,
you can retreat periodically with glycol on any surface, painted or bare,
and with borate solutions on bare wood.
Glycol's toxicity to humans is low enough that it has to be deliberately
ingested (about a half cup for a 150 lb. human); many millions of
gallons are used annually with few precautions and without incident.
It should not be left where children or pets can get at it, as smaller
doses would harm them, and they may be attracted by its reported sweet
taste that I have confirmed by accident. The lethal dose of
borates is smaller than of glycol, but the bitter taste
makes accidental consumption less likely.
Borate Wood Preservatives Commercial and Home-Brewed
Tim-Bor®:
about $3/lb. plus shipping.
Ship-Bor®: Same as Tim-Bor®; $19.95/lb. plus $2 shipping.
Bora-Care®:
$70/gal. plus shipping.
Home-Brew Water Solution of Borates: Based on U.S. Navy spec. of 60%
borax-- 40% boric acid (this ratio gives the maximum solubility of borates
in water); 65% water, 20 %borax, 15% boric acid; 15.8% borates; borax
costs 54 cents/lb. (supermarket), boric acid costs about $4/lb. in drug
stores (sometimes boric acid roach poison, 99% boric acid, is cheaper
in discount stores); equiv. to Tim-Bor® or Ship-Bor® at 30 cents/lb.
To make this solution mix the required quantities and heat until dissolved.
The boric acid, in particular, dissolves slowly. This solution is
stable (no crystals) overnight in a refrigerator (40°F.), so can be
used at temperatures at least as low as 40°F.
Home-Brew Glycol Solution of Borates:
50% glycol antifreeze, 28% borax, 22% boric acid. To make a stable
solution you mix the ingredients and heat till boiling gently. Boil
off water until a candy thermometer shows 260°F. (This removes
most of the water of crystallization in the borax.) This solution
is stable at 40°F and has a borate content of 26%. With antifreeze
at $6/gal. and borax and boric acid prices as above, this costs
about $15/gal.