✨ Elevate your woodwork with a crystal-clear, eco-smart finish! 🌿
Aqua Coat Water-Based Clear Wood Grain Filler Gel is a fast-drying, low odor, and low VOC wood filler designed for deep pore penetration and smooth finishes. Ideal for a variety of woods and projects, it offers easy sanding, stainability, and paintability with water cleanup, making it a professional-grade, environmentally friendly choice for flawless wood surfaces.
Color | Clear |
Brand | AquaCoat |
Material | Wood |
Size | Pint |
Item dimensions L x W x H | 3.55 x 3.55 x 4.2 inches |
Item Weight | 1.1 Pounds |
Finish Type | Smooth, Clear |
Recommended Uses For Product | Table, bar and tabletops, Carpentry, Keepsake Boxes, Furniture, DIY Woodworking, Luthier, Woodworking |
Coverage | around 4.73-5.67 square meters per pint or around 9.46-11.35 square meters per quart |
Compatible Material | Wood |
Liquid Volume | 1 Quarts |
Number of Items | 1 |
Manufacturer | ?AQUA COAT |
Unit Count | 16.0 Fluid Ounces |
UPC | 748252493613 785971690725 |
Part Number | Aqua Coat Pint |
Item Weight | 1.14 pounds |
Product Dimensions | 3.55 x 3.55 x 4.2 inches |
Country of Origin | USA |
Item model number | C7-U2EV-QXAE |
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
Finish | Smooth, Clear |
Item Package Quantity | 1 |
Batteries Included? | No |
Batteries Required? | No |
M**N
Great stuff
I'm working with zebra wood, an exotic hardwood but very porous. Thus stuff fills in all the pours evenly so the final finish us perfectly smooth. Love this stuff m
P**K
GREAT - highly recommend
So far - LOVE this stuff! Easy to use and works for grain filling and smoothing!
J**E
Awesome product. Crappy delivery.
The product is wonderful. I use it in my wood turning projects. Unfortunately the handling could have been better. Cmon guys!
G**N
Great Product.
I was hesitant at first. Thought I was probably doing it wrong but my wood projects turned out BEAUTIFUL. I used it on Walnut. Finished with brushed on Lacquer. Came out beautiful! When I run out I will buy it again.
C**E
Doesn't dry "crystal clear" if applied in larger cracks
Works as described but does not dry "Crystal Clear" like it says it does.. Great for filling wood grain and tiny pores in the wood like described in the videos but if you've got any inclusions or worm holes you'll want to fill them with some epoxy first if you really want those spots to be "Crystal Clear". Followed the instructions to a T using the aquacoat x-119 sanding sealer, then the aquacoat Clear wood grain filler, finished with aquacoat Gloss clear Laquer
D**E
Excellent properties
Applied with a body filler spreader, this stuff goes on smoothly, dries quickly to a completely clear finish, sands to a fine white powder with no clogging of sandpaper, and cleans up with water. Grain filling is uniformly excellent. I’ve used this only with shellac- and water-based finishes, so I can’t comment on its use with oil based finishes. Most highly recommended.
T**K
Easy to apply filler that doesn't tint the wood
The best thing about this filler for me was its soft gel texture. It's not so loose that it flows but not so viscous that it's hard to spread. I applied it easily with a shop towel, working it into the grain with a circular motion. It dried quickly - I typically gave it 45 minutes but could have probably sanded sooner. One mistake I made was that I applied/sanded 3 coats of filler before any seal coat on my finished piece and that prevented some of the end grain in particular from absorbing my finish and taking on the darker color we see when we apply our first coat of finish. That left my piece a bit splotchy until I gave it a vigorous sanding and then re-applied my wax oil finish. My plan for future will be to apply a coat of shellac or finishing oil, then proceed with the Aqua Coat filler until smooth before putting on my final finish coats. I've always found the texture of filler to be a pain - too runny or too stiff - and this product really hits the sweet spot for me.
D**D
Difficult to work with. "May" NOT be what your after depending...
Ok, I have tried , tried and tried again to work with this product for two years now. And I am NOT a novice nor "Weekend warrior" just cometh to finishing. I switched to this from "Crystalac" after some bad experiences with "It", and figured, "As I look for another, Clear" Grain Filler, to save you some trouble. "I hope".Depending on the wood you are working with and it's grain type and depth you "will", get differing results. But you will NOT get a satisfactory result with any wood having very large, hard grain ridges. Like "Red Oak" which just that species and trying to use Aquacoat to smooth out the grain has cost me not only money and ALLOT of time but also a few customers. "Having had one that waited over a month for a product in process that the Aquacoat simply would not smooth the hardwood grain to where the customer was at ALL, "Happy" with the result! On tight-grained hardwoods like mahogany, Cocobolo and Rock Maple it works "So-so to decently" It also will "Pull" the color from dye or stains into itself. Which IS a problem if you are trying to finish more than one color or shade a one time with a brush or even the same rag. I have used all things you would ever consider to work this material and I am sure a few you would not! The best way I have found is to use several different ways to apply it in a series. the first several coats VERY thick with simply a plastic spreader, "Like the yellow one in the pics I put there to show you". Then as you get a little progress as far as grain ridge depth reduction, I start using a brush. Dabbing clods of it onto the wood with a mixing stick and spreading "With the grain" to disperse and then perpendicular to the grain to finish using just the tip of the brush as it begins to thicken. When using the spreader it is pressure, "Allot of it" while spreading it at first which gets it into all the pores and fissures in the wood. This pressure is enough to also make a little heat which helps work it in. After getting it spread as even as possible with the tool I stop and just use my hands. Smoothing the ridges and waves left by the spreader until I just barely touch the surface at all going over the entire piece many times. It IS easier to work with it in a hot environment also. whether spreading OR sanding the warmer it is the easier to work it. Sanding "Can" be a pain because it tends to clump. If it is cool at all the clumps are like crystals that bind together ever forming larger one's that work as a sharp crystal would under your sanding medium so you have to stop every five seconds to clear the sanding medium, "Screens or paper" or you will get gouge-marks the size of the crystal that has formed! Last in the series I use a rag and my hand OR finally, just my hand. Putting a very thin coat on one at a time. Wet-sanding can be tricky because being water based, if you use too much water it tends to want to "Come apart at the seams", at a point that you'll find...… And find miserable. Yes, this all means MANY coats. I think the least number I have done to get a decent finish? Maybe a dozen. But on average? At least twice that number. I do everything from small pieces "3" x 6" " to fairly large one's like in the pics. The pics are of three 24" x 48" inch panels. Before I gave up completely on this product I figured I would give it a good "College", try one last time. On these 3 panels I have used almost two full, 16 Oz. tubs "Small", of the Aquacoat! AND I am NOT kidding! With maybe 16-17, coats in total on each panel. So with shipping over $50 worth of the stuff. I tried different ways of application and methods on each of these panels, "Again"! With again, "Differing" results. The "Teal" colored panel is nothing more than a workbench-top for me once completed and it is just plywood that I used some old, leftover dye on. But the other two have paying customers waiting. Both the blue and the Red panels were dyed, then sealed with "Varithane", Clear, sanding sealer before applying any of the Aquacoat. The Teal panel had five layers of "Minwax" Polyurethane "before", using any Aquacoat on it at all. I used 'How Much? Of the Aquacoat on these three? And STILL I can feel and see the grain on two of the panels! "The teal panel DID have the five poly coats on them, and it DOES look pretty good now even without the last few top-coats of poly"! The shrink coefficient on this stuff has to be a fantastic multiple, OR it really does NOT "FILL", much of anything does it! Just adding another "Layer" each time "IT", is laid down! I hope the pics translate well. They were hi-def, 16 million pixels but they are what they are on here. I know you could still see the woodgrain with the naked eye where I placed the camera lens on my Nikon when taking them. All three panels were sanded to 2000 grit currently as well. Good Luck!
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