When I change the oil on my truck I use that oil on my wooden fence. It works great. And I re-do it about every other year. It's free, looks good and makes the fence last longer.
@EverythingElliott5 ай бұрын
Reduce, reuse, recycle
@kellyvcraig4 ай бұрын
And that's why my fence looks far better than all those around me. All would do well to note the oil can be put on with a pump sprayer if it's thinned a bit, but mists, so a mask is a must.
3 ай бұрын
As I understand from Jed Clampet it comes up out of the ground. Are you not simply returning it from whence it came?
@smallcityhomesteaders16003 ай бұрын
Keeps the bugs off it as well
@terrynorthern383 ай бұрын
Dumb pollution on your place
@richardgerrald20802 ай бұрын
I’ve done my deck, privacy fence, and outside wood siding buildings for several years. It’s the best wood treatment I know of. Learned this from my grandfather. No Thompson’s water stain for me!
@normanmcdonald73525 ай бұрын
my grand father use to have a small dia. barrel he'd put all the used oil in and soak posts in for fencing they never rotted over 50 - 60 years later i'm 71 and some of those post are still in great shape
@EverythingElliott5 ай бұрын
That’s a great idea. I’ve heard of people drilling 3/4” hole into the center of posts by the ground and filling with oil each year to preserve the underground portion
@jimosullivan48665 ай бұрын
i still use that trick , probably do 200posts every year
@kamilegier47304 ай бұрын
I learned this from my grandfather as well and use this method for fence post and many other things on the farm
@AT-os6nb4 ай бұрын
add a little creosote and theyll last even longer. but you can't buy it anymore cause of the greeny leftards
@ralan3504 ай бұрын
I learned this technique from my grandfather I still use it
@Darkice774 ай бұрын
I have fence posts on my property that have been there around 100 years. People used to soak them for months in used oil. Then just put them in the ground. They don't rot, and the bugs don't eat them. The only thing that damages them is time, and water. But it takes a lot of time, and a lot of water.
@BonsaiZendog4 ай бұрын
They would also drill a filler hole near the base just to top off
@GunGuy2584 ай бұрын
@@BonsaiZendog I thought the hole was mid ways up? I did mine up higher.
@kellyvcraig4 ай бұрын
Cap the tops, like they do pier posts an such around marinas, and you'll add even more time. I build a wood fence around part of my dogs' run. I cut a bunch of scrap granite I was allowed to pull from a granite fabricator's scrap pile into 5"x5" squares. I used a variable speed angle grinder and relatively inexpensive diamond polishing disks for granite polishing to polish the edges. Now, the tops of my posts are unique and protected from the elements (I also put a 5 degree angle on the top of all the horizontal 2x4 supports, so water would run off them, rather than sit and soak in.
@joelmarcy80273 ай бұрын
I had an old time neighbor when I was a kid (40 yrs ago). He’d axe the bottoms to a point to drive them better and he’d soak them in oil like you say. I remember him telling me one day while he was working that his grandfather put in some of the post I was seeing. This old guy was in his late 70’s back then.
@frankdeleon92933 ай бұрын
Is there any motor oil ,I guess used motor oil will work?
@fridebloney5 ай бұрын
I just saw this video. I wanted to tell you a few things from my experience as a 56 yr old. My grandpa was born in 1912. In 1947 he used sawmill lumber to construct a "rack" he basically dug by hand into the side of a small embankment. Stood posts up vertically approximately the length of a car from the edge of the small embankment. Then laid boards horizontally from the top edge of the bank extending out to the posts. He used it and I did my father and his brothers to do all sorts of automotive work. That rack is still there and solid. Of course because of the oil. 3 coats on a trailer or deck is too much all at once. 2 light or one heavy every eight months for a few years is fine. And that's plenty for a long time. This is really the cool part though. You can go to any paint supplier and buy black or other dark color paint pigments. It doesn't take much but you think that deck looks nice? Which it does in my opinion but mix pigment with the oil and BAM! OMG it's like something from the rich and famous magazines!
@EverythingElliott5 ай бұрын
I honestly never thought about tinting it, but that is a great idea. Thanks!
@lucianonotte14445 ай бұрын
I remember they used to spray used oil on gravel roads worked great till some tree hugger thought is wasn't envirementally save ?😮
@joeyoungs84264 ай бұрын
@@lucianonotte1444Ah the good old days…
@bigguns45acp4 ай бұрын
@EverythingElliott It's actually a good idea because the color in stain is what protects from sun damage, the oil protects from water. I used to use tinted Thompsons, but it never lasted, but I discovered that the darker I went the longer, its protection lasted. For longer lasting protection I would give it a week or two and add another coat, then again with a dark Grey or black color pigment for a final coat. You will get much longer protection do to the wood being more soaked with oil.
@rollinontwojohnny35864 ай бұрын
@@lucianonotte1444 Don’t you mean a bark eater! 😂
@klpittman14 ай бұрын
A friend of mine built a 70 x 50 foot barn sheathed with 12 inch x 14 ft rough cut poplar boards from his sawmill. Sprayed 50/50 mix of diesel fuel and used motor oil inside and out with a pump up sprayer. Looked like dark walnut stain. After nearly 20 years still no rot.
@drd19244 ай бұрын
I read many people use the same on their trailer decking, but one guy said, instead of 50% motor oil he used Tractor Hydraulic fluid because theyre good priced at tractor supply, and after a couple days wasn't oily anymore
@kolgrillarn4 ай бұрын
How does it smell a hot summerday?😵🤮
@shirleymurphy19584 ай бұрын
Used oil is a wonderful anti rust spray for undercoating your vehicle.
@kolgrillarn4 ай бұрын
@@shirleymurphy1958 Agree that but only from the gearbox and mixed with a thickener!
@oNeGiAnTLiE4 ай бұрын
I have heard otherwise. Though i tend to agree with you, there are some that say the water travels beneath the oil and is trapped there somewhat. Hmm. Could be. @shirleymurphy1958
@chanchan53494 ай бұрын
We had a huge retaining wall made with old railroad ties and every couple of years re-applied used motor oil & diesel. It’s been standing for over 50 years. I also put used motor oil in sand in a big metal bucket. I’ll put my shovels, garden forks, any metal tools in the bucket after use. Keeps everything rust free & clean.
@VndNvwYvvSvv3 ай бұрын
Doesn't it stink?
@VndNvwYvvSvv3 ай бұрын
Doesn't it stink?
@macfady21813 ай бұрын
We have old kreosole railway ties as deck posts that have been around our place that long, sitting unwrapped in the ground, never treated with oil or anything. As far as tools, vehicle frames, trailers, etc. I think transmission fluid has more anticorrosive additives in it than motor oil.
@PredatorOmnivore3 ай бұрын
The old Railroad Ties had the wood preservative called "creosote". That chemical was the first known chemical carcinogen that cause testicular cancer, along with other cancers, in Chimney Sweeps in England. What is amazing to me is that Hippy Dippy Vegetarian oh-so-natural use old Railroad Ties to make their raised bed vegetable gardens.
@StubbsMom2 ай бұрын
I actually saw that tip, of putting oil in sand and keeping tools in it, on Martha Stewart's show years ago!
@oneshoeless4 ай бұрын
My dad used to take the oil changes and "paint" the wooden fence on the property. The fence is still looking good 20 years later. It works.
@Quadraticus3144 ай бұрын
Because the compounds are so f ing toxic that nothing (no bacteria or fungi) will ever grow on it !!! Until the water is washing away the compounds on your damned property and well water and then you have to apply it again for another 20 years of happy poisoned wooden fence, perfect heritage for future generations!!! Keep applying the poisons oil each 20 years !!!! I would put an American Flag drilled into the fence, just to show how much you love that land, and people ! '' It works ''
@tjshine74443 ай бұрын
In the 60's we lived in a dirt road in Arizona, always dusty. My dad would change his oil and spread it across the dirt road to cut down the dust.
@deanevangelista63593 ай бұрын
It’s just super thin asphalt, so why not?
@sylvainlaurence15543 ай бұрын
And still smell old oil after month…..
@occamraiser3 ай бұрын
And how's your Dad?
@judipauli21305 ай бұрын
We built a retaining wall and used old motor oil from our buddy’s auto shop (free), mixed with kerosene, to spray on the wall of 4” X 4” PT wood. We mixed with kerosene to make it thin enough to spray on. We added posts in front of wall, every 8’ & painted them with just the old motor oil, so they were darker. It looks fabulous! It still looks great 3 yrs later.
@mutteringmale4 ай бұрын
Kerosene, diesel oil, very close in the distilling tower of oil products btw.
@twtarmo12703 ай бұрын
And it burns great!😂
@sylvainlaurence15543 ай бұрын
And smell for months….
@richardclifton41204 ай бұрын
I use a combination of two items to protect any wood outside. You have to let it dry fully but it repels water for 2 years before reapplication is needed. It is not slippery when wet with water and it will bring life back to old weathered wood. The mix I use is a 3-to-1 mixture of Used Motor oil from an oil change you do on your car, plus 1 part diesel. I put the mixture in a 2-gallon pump sprayer and spread it with a nylon bristle street broom. When done you can wipe your hand across the bristles of the broom and nothing will come off on your hand. The grain of the wood will swell slightly and close those cracks if the boards are weathered, but it works great. I have tried Thompson's Water Seal and it is not an inexpensive item but the floor will be slippery when using it whereas the use of old oil and diesel will not be. Thompson's doesn't last as long either.
@leonhart24525 ай бұрын
If you want you can mix the old oil with diesel fuel to thin it so you can covermore and being thinner it penetrates better. It may take a few more of these thin coat to get the look you want. It not only protects from moisture, it also protects from bugs.
@Buster-im5so4 ай бұрын
It protects via toxic, cancer causing elements.
@deanframe90954 ай бұрын
And add melted wax to it! It repels water! Paint thinner one gallon one cup melted wax with boiled linseed oil or toung oil! Ta da! Last 3 years here in northern Minnesota! Worst weather of all. Got the recipe from Noah Bradley hand made houses! 😊
@chezLynn4 ай бұрын
Heck! Y'all are making me wanna do my own oil changes, again, so I can use the old oil on my new fence. Luv this idea, because I can hack the odor of motor oil, but lived on a farm where former owner had sealed inside and out of enclosed back porch with linseed oil, and the stench of it was so sickening that the smell of linseed oil makes me sick, now.
@olbluetundra8814 ай бұрын
You are right. I mix used motor oil, with whatever else oil I have laying around and thin it with diesel. My back porch has been there more 20 years with no rot or bug damage. The portion my wife threw a fit and wanted to use Thompsons water seal. We reseal every year. 4 years later. The wood needs replacing. Again. I either burn or use oil. Sometimes both. I've got a board on my bbq pit I built when I was 14. I used both used motor oil of a semi and burnt it. 39 years ago this month on The 19. Still there and still good. Just reburn it every 5 to 6 years. Always sits outside to. Never covered.
@chrisw4224 ай бұрын
Exactly, mix the diesel fuel with it first.
@pauljandourek32604 ай бұрын
You are spot on. I have been doing this for 30 years and the price is right. Good job.
@JohnOdette4 ай бұрын
As far as his house goes he could color match and just pay over those red white and blues
@dennisgarberАй бұрын
How long does it last?
@skrywenko65964 ай бұрын
I painted my house wood trim with this about 30 years ago.. but I use diesel and roofing tar with a little bit of raw linseed oil. i repaint every couple years then after it reached a permanent stain colour i liked . I stopped about 20 years ago. and I have not stained it again since. and it still holding up and no rot anywhere
@morrisl727 күн бұрын
great formula, i on the other hand just payed $20 for a quart of stain, probably cost them a quarter to make it before Home depot marked it up 80%. retail/stain manufacturing, great businesses to rip people off on.
@johnbagewll23215 күн бұрын
This was back when lumber wasn’t engineered.
@littlehuey56794 ай бұрын
One tip I use is to filter the oil thru a couple of old tee shirts together the carbon particulate out and it won’t rub off before it weathers !
@mleachx14 ай бұрын
I did this to my deck 2 years ago. Things I encountered. The smell lasted for about a week. This didnt bother me but for some reason the internets make a big deal about this. I probably did 2 coats worth and it repelled water nicely. The sun did fade most of my color out of it which i wasnt happy about. I also did get mold/mildew on my rails that were in sun mostly, I read it feeds on the oil and youre more prone to having it on wood, but a bleach and water mix helps clear it. needs about a week of soaking before I didnt have a film on my hands and shoes. I have since changed to dark tung oil this year to add a darker color and to see how the color fades or doesnt. If it stays, I'll probably do a used oil topcoat as a maintenance item to keep it water repellent. It also does NOT make it more flammable like people want to worry about.
@lancep93944 ай бұрын
I wonder how Trans fluid would look? Nice red hue maby😂
@CherylHughes-s9j4 ай бұрын
@@lancep9394 STINKS
@raymondbourque16694 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing your experience. I was wondering about smell and if it left a oily film on for a bit.
@tonyz64214 ай бұрын
Because they don't want you to use one of our greatest resources...OIL!
@erikisberg38863 ай бұрын
If You want it darker, mix in som carbon black wetted with alcohol. I do that to wood tar, works great. Another trick is to impregnate the wood surface with hot dilute copper sulfate solution and let dry before oiling. Works nicely with motor oil, tar and drying oils such as linseed oil. I had zero mold issues after doing this. Grandparents over here used old motor oil mixed with tar sometimes on docks and all kinds of outdoor farm wood. Only issue I have noticed is that to much oil can make the wood soft.
@edwardmacintosh94764 ай бұрын
You got my vote on that. I am old man now & we used creosote and thinner with some diluted tar mix. It has to soak in well and smells for awhile but lasts for years . Smell does go away so thats ok. The wood will not rot & no bugs or insects go near it . Good job on your deck.
@davehubler2595Ай бұрын
Creosote I remember using that on fencing as a kid & boy o does that stuff burn when u get it all over ur skin! Good stuff tho creosote & oil
@MiaogisTeas25 күн бұрын
@@davehubler2595 Stinks, too. Rather use oil + diesel haha
@mikecorrado49715 ай бұрын
Great job that will last! Re-coat when necessary! I remember oiling the floor in my uncle’s grocery store. That floor was easy to clean and was not slippery at all.
@stevenkeeffeАй бұрын
My grandfather had a small grocery store. My dad told me stories about having to "oil the floors" in the store once a year when he was a kid. IIRC, it was kerosene and tar mixed in a mop bucket and applied with a mop.
@daleschores37114 ай бұрын
I did this years ago on a new mailbox post and loved the look so much that I also did my wood shed two years ago.
@marciam62244 ай бұрын
My husband grew up on a dirt road and they used to come through and spray oil on it to keep the dust down.
@JeepNut-rq5fb4 ай бұрын
yep! all the gravel roads around here had oil dumped on them anywhere there was a house. Saw dad dump who knows how many gallons along the fences to keep the weeds out of them... Pretty common weed killer back in the day.
@paulus.tarsensus3 ай бұрын
You've got the perfect way to recycle. We saved used motor oil to use as a wood preservative, reapplied every other year to really old clapboard on outbuildings. We sprayed it onto compacted earth floors to keep the dust down, keep groundhogs from digging burrows underneath and discouraging insects. We mixed it with rancid vegetable oils and kerosene sometimes. Some folks made whitewash with old white lead paint thinned with kerosene, which sucked it into old fencing ( worked better than limewash to repel insects ).
@kylemccourt6632 ай бұрын
LOL I wonder why! Perfect way to recycle.... right into your water table.
@paulus.tarsensus2 ай бұрын
@@kylemccourt663 Nope. Used motor oil contains a lot of things like nonanes, which are largely inert and oxidise slowly. Used judiciously in spot applications like this and others, they are not a bio-hazard. When gas stations recycle used motor oil, they are also utilised and refined in various ways. The idea is that every waste output should be inputs to other production processes and nothing should be put into landfills or put into long-term storage in 'repositories'. Truth be told, radioactive waste can also be upcycled. The United States does not recycle spent fuel rods from nuclear power plants, but this is a routine practice in France, for example. Used motor oil can be utilised in multiple ways and it's only hazardous if you dump it down the drain, directly into roadside ditches or trash collection receptacles ( I have seen some folks do this ). We should all abhor waste and find ways to utilise and repurpose it instead.
@darrylschmidt7045 ай бұрын
I don't see a problem with this. I am on my fourth set of trailer 2x12s and will go this route. One recommendation from a former painter... Start on a board when applying the oil and finish it. When you do square areas, the overlap of areas can show up later when the oil/paint wears thin. For the haters, it's a quality of workmanship thing...most people wont get it until they see the overlap areas in their job months later and go "that looks like crap".
@EverythingElliott5 ай бұрын
While I don’t see overlap currently, there certainly is a possibility of that as it starts to wear away, you make a valid point, and when I go to reapply this in a couple years, I’ll certainly do that method. Thanks for the tip, and thanks for watching!
@fredholley62485 ай бұрын
Yep, I always do a full board length at a time. Might take a bit longer, but certainly looks worlds better in 5-6 months.
@jeffproctor16905 ай бұрын
@@darrylschmidt704 thats why you should be applying it with a Hudson type pump up sprayer. Filter oil through paint filter to remove dirt and sludge. Thin it with either deisel or gas if it needs. Pump up sprayers will leave less definite overlaps and light/dark patches.
@lylejurmu36965 ай бұрын
I prefer to spray it on
@bguen12344 ай бұрын
Pro tip: use fresh oil mixed 50/50 with diesel. It goes on super easy, looks great, and gives a much cleaner finish, and it's still very inexpensive.
@HangarGang3 ай бұрын
I have a friend that is a diesel mechanic and he gets me a gallon of used diesel oil every year. I used a roller and put it on my new trailer decking. I let my treated decking dry a month in the summer sun, then put 2 coats of the used oil on it straight, no dilution. It took about a week to dry, and a couple weeks to not smell anymore. Water still beads on it and I get compliments on it all the time. The used diesel motor oil is a much darker black, it looks great on my silver trailer. It has faded some in the past yr, so I may do another treatment, but I doubt I’ll ever need to do it again. It’s not slick at all, even when wet.
@TinMan05555 ай бұрын
Just finished re-flooring my 24x7 car-hauler trailer, using untreated pine. I did a few extra steps just to try for a maximum results. After cutting the boards to proper length, and because this is the only chance I will get to totally address this surface without making a godawfull mess, I began by choosing which side of each of the boards was gonna be the under side of the finished decking. Put those on sawhorses with this “bottom side” facing up and left them in the sun for a day thinking that the 100 degree heat may “open” the pores a bit more for maximum absorption. Using a paint roller, I applied a heavy coat of a 50/50 mix of used motor oil and diesel fuel paying extra attention to the ends of each. After each coat I let them sit in the sun for 24 hours to “dry”. The total was three coats. During this “drying” time I removed the old decking, removed all the old hardware, wire wheeled any rust that had formed under the old deck and brushed on 3 thick coats of Rust oleum to the entire frame that would be under the new deck. I also used the opportunity to redo all the wiring for lights and brakes on the now naked frame. Now I was ready to put new lumber on the trailer. After placing the boards loosely, and before screwing them down, I mopped on three coats to any area that would be covered by a channel or hold-down strap. Thinking that I will pretty much always have access to this surface of the deck, I did all three applications in one day but over several hours, again looking for maximum absorption. Finally, placed boards and installed the end-plates and self threading deck screws. Then applied three coats of the oil/ diesel mixture over three days. Everybody that sees the results comments on how good it looks with some even asking “ what kinda wood is that?”. I figure the Texas heat is gonna dictate when I need to be reapplying this “secret” preservative. 🫡
@EverythingElliott5 ай бұрын
Sounds like you did a great job and really took your time with that project
@TinMan05555 ай бұрын
@@EverythingElliott thank you sir.
@joewoodchuck38245 ай бұрын
I'm not clear on what purpose the diesel component serves.
@mikebriggs2k5 ай бұрын
@@joewoodchuck3824most likely propose would be to thin the oil a bit to help it absorb deeper into the wood.
@markmurphy80665 ай бұрын
@@joewoodchuck3824 The diesel (or any distillate) thins the oil so it absorbs better and deeper into the wood.
@toomanyhobbies20114 ай бұрын
Used oil is also great for rust control. I "painted" the suspension and lower frame of my old travel trailer several years ago and the protection is complete. I suppose it should be redone every five years, but there's plenty of used oil around.
@skiptheroad5 ай бұрын
It looks great. I'm going to try it on my daughter's deck. My grandfather used to use motor oil on his tobacco barns. I remember his barns looked almost black though. He must have put on many coats of really dirty oil over the years.
@EverythingElliott5 ай бұрын
I'm sure after years and years of doing it, the wood got progressively darker with each coat
@larrysprouse8414Ай бұрын
70 years old and been doing this all my life,it just works
@leefottler47445 ай бұрын
The mix I have been using is diesel fuel and asphalt roof tar. My mix is 5 gal diesel(actually about 4.5 as I leave room for the other stuff in the bucket) and 1/2 gallon of roof tar, plain no fiber or anything. I also melt in 2 lbs of gulf wax, cause, hey why not. Comes out chestnut brown and you can adjust the color with more of less asphalt. Works well and is cost effective. I was in the same boat as you. BTW , “my” mix is not original, actually comes from the forest service bulletin from some time ago.
@occamraiser3 ай бұрын
Holy Cow, and how toxic is the rainwater runoff from your roof? Somewhere on the scale of toxic->carcinogen..... or quite possibly both.
@deerhunter74822 ай бұрын
Add transmission fluid for red tint
@markw83112 ай бұрын
@@occamraiser Probably about as toxic as all the rainwater running of all our asphalt roads everywhere.
@msheart22 ай бұрын
@@occamraiser and those lines in the skies for the last 30 yrs, how toxic are they?
@christianmattison60964 ай бұрын
I do this with the deck on my work trailer and it works well. I have been strongly thinking about using it on the deck on my house. After watching this, I'm prertty sure I will!
@Amber-mv8wz5 ай бұрын
I really like the way this looks on your deck. My only suggestion is to do the posts that are visible as well, so they blend better. Shou sugi ban, or yakisugi is an ancient Japanese method of preserving wood by scorching it, scrapping it then coating it in oil. It creates a much darker finish than just the used motor oil alone does. It really brings out the variations in the grain of the wood & can be quite beautiful. We've always done this to the bottom of our wooden fence posts. First charring them then soaking that end in a barrel of oil overnight before installing. It's a fair amount of work but easier & far cheaper than replacing fence posts every few years. The 4x4 posts we installed in 87' when we bought our farm are still standing strong.
@EverythingElliott5 ай бұрын
That’s a good idea, I was kinda thinking out of sight out of mind, but I think you’re right I’ll go back and coat them
@Mix1mum4 ай бұрын
I second this mans approach, as it's what I do myself. When you shou sugi ban, you're torching until you have an even carbon layer across the board. You should notice it's chatoyancy. I don't scrap it if it's structural, I just oil it while it's still hot. Char and tar, baby. Char and tar.
@eltonnoway78644 ай бұрын
kzbin.infoUccZsqEqvGA?feature=share
@SeanFitz-vo4fm4 ай бұрын
Cool! I'm gonna light my deck on fire tomorrow. That should look great! (jk)
@DaveFromTheSixties4 ай бұрын
As a kid on the farm one of my jobs was to “waste oil” all the wooden gates and posts every year. Worked a treat!
@tonysteinke72345 ай бұрын
Nice job. I have been doing this for 30 years! I too just do 1 coat every couple of years.
@EverythingElliott5 ай бұрын
I’m ok with applying more as the product is free. Thanks for watching
@adow73823 ай бұрын
I put down plywood on a utility trailer 25 years ago and coated top and bottom with used oil, still in great shape. Thanks for the video.
@Comet-hn3gm5 ай бұрын
No controversy, just good sense. Repurposing is better than recycling, because you know the end result.
@unclegeorge78454 ай бұрын
This crap was buried eons ago for a reason. Repurposing plant life poison is not better than recycling.
@davemi004 ай бұрын
So Nicely said !! I make my own too. Wood Log planter boxes 90% oil/ 10% diesel. Glow in the sunshine.
@1nvisible14 ай бұрын
*10w30 is too dark. You should've used 5w50.*
@Comet-hn3gm4 ай бұрын
@@1nvisible1 lol
@jackbonnette42894 ай бұрын
@russbell6418 how do you know this? Can you cite some sources or basis?
@bill29-g3b4 ай бұрын
A long time ago I lived on a working farm and ranch out in the country in Florida for many years. Old oil is good for lots of things. Treating wood, bug repellent, weed killer(lantana), rust inhibitor, etc. Great job on the deck, brother. Cheers.
@ohiofarmer59184 ай бұрын
With 0W16 oil at half the mileage the dealer does, my oil is thin and honey brown. I save it all and put it in the original containers. It's also good for coating inside the doors and painting on any little parts of the suspension that form a light rust.
@omegaman74564 ай бұрын
My formula: 1 part copper-based wood preservative, 1 part diesel fuel, 2 parts used motor oil, and mix 1/2 gallon roofing tar and gasoline together until its all dissolved; add that. Important, clean well, let dry for days, completely. Apply stain at the hottest time of the day. Keep it thin, let it absorb it, and give it all it can take. Fence post can be end-treated by soaking.
@JoeGraves244 ай бұрын
When you say ‘part’, can that mean gallons? You later specify 1/2 gallon each of roof tar and gasoline so I wouldn’t want to get proportions off.
@karmelicanke4 ай бұрын
i think tar is the magic ingredient for longevity. a fellow once said that his dad put a shingle roof on his house in the Prairies where weather is HOT in the summer and bitterly cold in winter. Two coatings of tar in 60 yrs, no re roofing needed.
@callmeishmaelk7674 ай бұрын
@@omegaman7456 these formulas are probably close to what pitch was back in the day. Obviously worked on wooden ships.
@bubbahogwallop96404 ай бұрын
Powdered charcoal and raw linseed oil mixed and painted on wood fence posts make them rot proof. Not a good finish for above ground as it never dries. Not charcoal briquettes but real charcoal.
@lesliehunter18234 ай бұрын
Its gorgeous!
@dojodance4 ай бұрын
I had 15 - 20 year old clean oil with lost lables in the shed. I also had a small deck that would accumulate moss and slippery black slime making it to dangerous to walk on. Nothing worked for more than a few months and was told that it would have to be ripped out. So I used a pressure clener than used the clean oil. It soaked in and made the browns in the wood pop. It looked like expensive cedar. Very pretty and no more slippery slimy dangerous deck for free. For the first time we love our deck.
@iwerk2hard3 ай бұрын
Where did you get clean oil for free?
@castingmynetforChrist3 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing your experience. Does it smell? Would it be bad for my dog? I have oil from my son changing out his oil, could that be used?
@francinemiranda84093 ай бұрын
His shed.
@morrisl727 күн бұрын
95% of contractors will tell you to rip it out when it just needs refurbishing, sadly most people listen to these "experts"
@christopherhoward17433 ай бұрын
Cool video. This comment section is a gold mine of good ideas!
@jim-se5xc2 ай бұрын
So bland without any shade trees beside deck. A big shaggy roller would paint it in 15 minutes.
@diannavoss85523 ай бұрын
I want to try this on my deck railing. The deck is composite, but adding the trex railing is too expensive, so now will try this wood & oil method. Thank you so much for this tip.
@southernman58394 ай бұрын
I used Cabot Australian Timber oil ( Mahogany Flame ) it look great right now . I did it in the spring. Still looking good.
@chuckpugsley7594 ай бұрын
Great video, I used transmission fluid for the wood rails on my SeaRay express cruiser for decades. Transmission fluid leaves a mohagany colored finish. Brushed on with a paint brush and wipe off with a rag. There is no environment harsher than the south florida sun and salt water. Now I use a coat of motor oil and then sear with a propane torch to seal/close the pores in the wood and then another coat of oil wiped with a rag. It is beautiful dark walnut with semi-gloss look. Be sure to protect surrounding areas when using a torch.
@007gunlogo4 ай бұрын
Looks good! Up in the mountains, we used to utilize our old oil to coat the dirt road. Keeps the dust down.
@savannahsmiles17974 ай бұрын
the family summer home used that to keep the dust done cuz the access road went right by the house and the dust from cars going by would choke ya out if you sat on the porch.
@richardcleary91074 ай бұрын
Years ago a town highway Dept in NY would spray oil on all the dirt roads. Some city folks would think it was paved.
@troycramp13334 ай бұрын
I do the same thing with the retainer wall at the rear of our property. Tropical Australia is bad for black mould. Gave it a pressure wash and then used engine oil/turps, haven't had mould for over 3 years now and the dark black fades to a nice golden brown once its dry. Only have to recoat every other year
@elektro30004 ай бұрын
I always like the look of black oiled wood. The alternating tan and dark grey just look so much better to me than conventional brown stains.
@slowfinger24 ай бұрын
I soaked legs for two new sawhorses in a bucket of oil/diesel mix for about ten minutes. Painted the rest with oil mix. They sat for three years on the grassy ground, only being moved once. Bottom of legs 6 years later are still solid, no punkiness or corners wet-rotting up. Perfect.
@SeanFitz-vo4fm4 ай бұрын
Also, you made a new word! (punkiness). I'll try to use it in a sentence:)
@bobdunchad44642 ай бұрын
It works. A friend suggested using used hyd oil or ATF. They don't have the carcinogenic ingredients of used motor oil. He's got a 3' diameter oak stump with a 100lb anvil mounted on it. The tree was cut down over 20 years ago, and all the roots around it are still solid when struck with a 10lb sledge hammer.
@morrisl727 күн бұрын
thats nuts, itslike the oil works its way all down through the roots..dont be sure about it non toxicity, if nothing eats that for 20 year in the ground it cant be good for you lol.
@kabuti28394 ай бұрын
been using it on all my garden tool handles, scythe, hammer handles ect for decades.
@korona31033 ай бұрын
Creosote is by far the best stain I've used by a long shot, it's a shame it's not permitted any more, I get that it's dangerous but it does such a good job preserving wood!
@tuffteddy14464 ай бұрын
I coated the deck on my 4x8 utility trailer using this method. Pressure treated 2x6 boards. Put 3 really good coats on over the course of a week. Looks great, and I can tell that the lumber will last much longer now. I'm going to coat the new deck on my house using new motor oil this fall.
@jrcrandall60475 ай бұрын
The deck looks great. Love how it came out.
@EverythingElliott5 ай бұрын
Thanks! I'm super happy with the outcome as well!
@Cake415794 ай бұрын
I have used old transmission fluid with good results. It gives it a reddish tint also. Which I think looks nice.
@markj42024 ай бұрын
I 'treated' a retaining wall once with used motor oil when I was underemployed and didn't have a lot of cash. Turned out very good and helped extend the life of the wall. Controversal or not, I don't have a problem with it. To me, it is a very good and economical way to recycle used motor oil.
@gregkral44673 ай бұрын
Right on, love how the grain is all darkened and contrasty. Nothin quite like a gorgeous wood grain.
@Laryanka3 ай бұрын
I did that on my old fence after power washing , it stunk for few weeks, but looks like new. Then flipped decking boards and did the same. So waterproof, the puddles on it after rain. Love results. On the contrary to my clean approach to environment this is too small to make damage.
@vinniegillotti93473 ай бұрын
I’ve done this for 40 years the same with all my trailers I have a cabin in Maine. The snow gets so high that they literally ride snowmobiles across my roof are use oil on the siding. I never have a bug problem. I never have water damage problems like you said it’s freeand it works fantastic. I also use it on my Barnes in Texas. No termites here.
@Bailey-y9b4 ай бұрын
You did it right, been doing my trailer for years with the motor oils i change from all my equipment. Transmission fluid has it's purpose too.
@kchedville4 ай бұрын
When building something new like a Deck -- I always now use Axle Grease to coat the top of the Beams underneath the top Deck Boards -- because in the past they began to Rot pretty quick even thou they were factory treated - they still rotted away and needed changing..... a pain in the Rear.
@migueljose29444 ай бұрын
Totally with you on this. I built a bridge across my creek and painted it with motor oil 5 years ago. Lumber is oak, white I believe. Most planks are still good. Ecologically I don’t see an issue. Read the ingredients on any paint or preservative and it says not to drink it. The planks are a bit slick when it’s raining but my dog and I have learned to slow down so nobody has gotten hurt yet. Thanks for posting!
@jeffdepriest19572 ай бұрын
We just built a new deck. We applied used diesel oil on the floor joists because it was really black and we applied used gasoline motor oil on the deck boards. We love it works great
@Derek-tk4wf3 ай бұрын
How long did it take before the smell of 'oil' went away? (As a guy, this is smart, but ooothers will complain about any odors from it)
@talon08633 ай бұрын
That is what I wanted to know. I guess I'll just test it out on some scrap wood. I'm guessing a couple of hot days will cause most of the VOCs to off-gas.
@talon08633 ай бұрын
I've seen two professional paint contracters use a deck sprayer and a broom, the kind of broom that works well inside the house. I was shocked at how little time it took them. The annual waterbase type stain
@sandrahilton46903 ай бұрын
I'm in the UK and I have used this on a new shed I bought. The finish you get when you buy your shed doesn't last long and buying more of the stuff to add a second coat onto the shed was going to cost a fortune. So I asked my mechanic if I could have some of the old oil - which he has to pay to get rid of - from changing engine oil when servicing a car and he said I could have as much as I like, he even delivered it for me! It worked brilliantly and I wouldn't hesitate to advise anyone to use it on new sheds, or even new wooden fences. As the man says, oil and water don't mix and if you use old oil to protect new wood, the wood, any wood, will last a very long time. After it is absorbed by the wood, you don't get any old oil on your hands etc either. Protect your wood for free folks!
@rinserepeat28774 ай бұрын
Yes. and I did this to my trailer as well. Good Job. IT DOES LAST!!! thanks for sharing.
@rob.taylor2 ай бұрын
I've used Linseed oil with a stain mixed in on my wood garage door that was in direct sunlight all day. It worked great.
@me1assassin4 ай бұрын
About 10-15% Diesel added to used motor oil. Spray, back roll if you wish (frankly just spray and let soak). Been around since diesel and oil. Houses were sprayed this way. Use old barrels and soak 4x's and 6x's and posts. it just works. For those yelling about this, what exactly do you think is in the oil based stuff at all the supply houses? Personally, I do decks and fences, initially every year for 2-3 years, after that you can get away easily with every other year, even every third. Fence and deck will last easily 100+ years. In some locations where you get a lot of mildew, moss, just add and oil based mildewcide.
@morrisl727 күн бұрын
im convinced the small internet army of anti oilers are bots paid for by the stain manufacturers, $20 a quart is insanity and actually criminal.
@coyotehill27723 ай бұрын
Been coating my wood truck bed for 12 years with oil. It lasts great it has salt sand mix in it all winter long. So from November until march. Sometimes sooner if we get an October snow. In the spring when I’m fixing whatever broke over the plowing season I broom it out change the oil and put a new coat on.
@matthewward6315 ай бұрын
Modern technology is just wonderful, but if you want something that actually works, old school is the best!
I just re oiled my trailer decks a couple of months ago and you are right they turn water well. I have been doing it to my hay wagons for thirty years and they were just made from oak that grew on my farm and the first deck lasted over 25 years. I also do my bridge flloor the same way and it lasted 30 years.
@mattypants4 ай бұрын
Nothing will beat modern polymer coatings. But this is a good cheap option.
@JosephFondaw4 ай бұрын
This is what we use to paint with and made our own coatings,I'm fifty three and was taught this from older more experienced painters. Nice to see it being used,great job, CUDOS TO YOU SIR
@rostang504 ай бұрын
I did my trailer with the same method and it turned out great.
@binaryflat29 күн бұрын
Back in the 90s I did my whole cabin exterior with used motor oil. I still looks good, but it is in the woods, so not much direct sunlight. It is stll dark like walnut stain. I have to admit, it smelled for a few days. I think this is economical, and it just makes sense!
@neiljohnson68155 ай бұрын
Controversial? Nope. I'm 77 and I remember this being done to porches and wood trailer floors when I was a child. What works, works,
@EverythingElliott5 ай бұрын
If it ain’t broke don’t fix it
@Hammer.J.Helmer4 ай бұрын
it's only controversial now because people want to pretend like the oil we got out of the ground is going to poison the world. While I wouldn't go dumping my used motor oil right next to my well, the rest of the worlds reaction is usually an overreaction.
@lightweight19744 ай бұрын
My late neighbor and good friend swore by this on trailor floors.
@jz70734 ай бұрын
Leaded gasoline worked too.
@timbarry50804 ай бұрын
I'm building a timber frame cabin on piers. I'm thinking of treating the 10x10 sills with the diesel/used motor oil thing.. my question is: is it gonna stay smelly forever and make the inside of my cabin smell like motor oil? Thank you
@adrockey4 ай бұрын
Great video. At the plant that I work at we treat our flatbed trailers with used engine oil and last a very long time.
@02blackLightning5 ай бұрын
This has been done for probably close to 50 years just in my family alone if not longer. We do it on all wood. Only thing that works nowadays bc of how cheap the finishes are nowadays. Like you said they don’t hold up. Household paint barely holds up nowadays passed the 5 year mark. But this is not a new thing by any means. I tell everyone with wooden trains to always do it. They always end up loving it and I love in FL. Holds up in our sun and weather so I’m sure it will just fine for you 👍
@EverythingElliott5 ай бұрын
Hoping to get a little more life out of the finish than the expensive chemical sealers that the big box stores peddle now a days
@petergoertzen86923 ай бұрын
I would totally do it. I have tried different products, and it doesn’t lest for more then one summer. Great idea. Thanks
@elsrog4 ай бұрын
Used oil works great on rust too. spray in the bottoms of your doors , rocker panels and everywhere rust grow on cars or trucks. spray or brush on frames . It takes less oil than you would think and very little end up on the ground.
@texasroots3 ай бұрын
I love this. I just realized this last year. Works great on all kinds of things. I used it on my trailer, various lumber, fence posts, logs, wooden hand tools,..... I already had sourced sealer for my fence, I needed to replace 12 panels, I reused the 4x4 posts, I pulled them all up and oiled the bottom 2ft; they soaked up 3 coats easy. I hear farmers do this and their fence posts outlive them. This nourishes and waterproofs the wood and keeps the bugs away. There are alot of mixtures used to undercoating car/truck frames too. And it's all effectively free. Amazing. I bet this keeps carpenter bees away too......anyone know? If so I have some more wood to treat :)
@loismaddux48005 ай бұрын
Good idea! Those old wood truck beds lasted a very long time!!
@1whitecottagelife7703 ай бұрын
At my grandma's old house, about every year or two I remember that during spring cleaning we were wiping the wood plank floors with some kind of diesel mixture that smelled very strongly, with a rag. That was one of my jobs, as a child. I was probably around 1st grade or so. My family was doing that partly to kill the bugs in the wood. I'm still alive and well, I'm 60, and I think I can still feel the smell of the diesel mixture, to this day
@sheltdog84634 ай бұрын
So I ended up with my Grandparents farm and the 80 acres that it sits on. On this property sits a huge barn, corn crib, tool shed and a storage shed and the entire property has a 3 strand bar wired fence around it. I know the barn and other buildings range from 80 to 100 yrs old barn being the oldest. So I start fixing the place up replacing rotten wood etc. Once I got it ready I went to my buddy’s auto shop and picked up 2 55 gallon drums of used motor oil and bought 25 gallons of diesel fuel. I cut the oil down to where it could be sprayed with a air gun and from there the rest was history. I collected the trunks of cedar trees for almost a year till I had enough to replace every post on the property and soaked the bottom half in straight oil before I set them in the ground. That was 8 years ago and not one spot of rot or termites have been seen. I bought 6 of the cheap HarborFreight spray guns when the were on sale for about $7.00 bucks and used every gun when I began spraying, all loaded and ready. This saved me thousands in paint or stain. Another tip I got from a old timer is that if you have cedar siding you can used old transmission fluid to add to your stain and it’ll last forever.
@edwardmyers32442 ай бұрын
Having lost my beloved dog to suspected ethylene glycol (most transmission fluids and break fluids) poisoning, I must warn you that it will kill animals should they drink it or water contaminated with it. I don;t know what a weak solution of it mixed with water will do, if say it mixed with rain water that blew onto your structure, nor do I know how fast it breaks down in the environment. Good luck.
@davidpotter74842 ай бұрын
@@edwardmyers3244 antifreeze has ethylene glycol.
@davidpotter74842 ай бұрын
@@edwardmyers3244 ethylene glycol is in antifreeze. There are test strips for coolant in the transmission, and they test for ethylene glycol. Transmission and brake fluid are traditionally mineral oil based, or in early ones, engine oil. Absolutely none in transmission or brake fluid. Dogs used to drink antifreeze because it was sweet, but it isn't any longer. They add a bittering agent to it. Its terrible seeing an animal suffer from drinking it.
@JMeixsell2 ай бұрын
This is a great idea and just what I need to put yet another coat of protection on the back wall of our house that is covered with reclaimed old, I mean really old, barn siding from the northeast. Every few years we put out big bucks to put a sealer on the wood that ends up looking like.... Yes, water repels but only for about 2 years and then I do it all over again. I'm going to do a test in one corner and wait to see what my good man thinks. If he agrees then I'll finish the wall. And I may do the front porch as well as the Thompson has completely worn off. And if I remember correctly, it's what Daddy used on the farm to coat posts. Used oil was always used somewhere else on the farm. You are brilliant!
@DonleyCove5 ай бұрын
I think it looks great! Some of the "old school" methods are just the best.
@EverythingElliott5 ай бұрын
That’s the truth
@ianbelletti62414 ай бұрын
Not all old school methods are better. There are reasons some of them went away such as the cardboard like sheathing materials we used to use on houses. My concern with this finish is in applications where food is involved. In that case, something food safe like mineral oil would be better. The problem with motor oils is toxicity to humans but it's probably no worse than what we treat pressure treated lumber with.
@robertjones-iv7wq4 ай бұрын
I use 2 parts motor oil, 2-parts clear zinc wood preserver (last year our federal "government" prohibited the sale of good solvent-based wood preserver), 2-parts chosen mix of oil-based wood stain for preferred color. It's what would be termed "transparent" unless you use pigment stains, then maybe semi-transparent. Yes I use two coats. Yes I do it again next year, and the year after. But I do have sheltered sections I have yet to do a second time (7 years now). I have a pergola-style 'roof' over part of my carport in half sun/shade that still looks great. I took this trick from my cheapskate aunt who finally decided her weathered cedar-sided house should look 'refreshed'. She went round to a few transmission repair shops, scrounged 10-15 gal used transmission fluid and used it to 'refinish' her entire house, deck & railings. It honestly looked great for maybe 3 years then needed to be re-applied, but never was (she was aging). It did kinda smell like a car for the first few months. I think new oil would have been better, but the aged color of the oil did look really good. My caveat is, if your wood has bad, decaying spots, deal with that first.
@929cbr_rr5 ай бұрын
As for pressure washing: I built the decks on the back of my house 24 years ago. I pressure wash every two years or so. The decks are still solid and the wood looks fine. I don't coat them with anything.
@EverythingElliott5 ай бұрын
Some people are very anti-powerwashing of decks and I’m not sure why
@929cbr_rr5 ай бұрын
@@EverythingElliott I suspect part of that may be that if you use a very high pressure and narrow nozzle, holding it to close, you can literally dig grooves into the wood. The user needs to operate the washer correctly.
@kevinoneill415 ай бұрын
@@EverythingElliott🙄🤨😳😱😭
@MachoRaton4 ай бұрын
I live in Central America I have always used oil on my wood porches and decks works super great my friends want to varnish or stain I’m with you Oil it does not rot we have lots of rain and sun. no sanding just more oil
@johnolsen70733 ай бұрын
I used a gallon of clean oil mixed with diesel on two trailers. looks good, a lighter finish. Less expensive than stain.
@jackwalshjr63733 ай бұрын
Looks Good. I think I will have mine oiled because I have the same problem with stain. It does not last.
@jonseim40305 ай бұрын
Might try this on new truck bed walls I'm making.
@EverythingElliott5 ай бұрын
Great way to protect them from the elements
@johnfeltes70543 ай бұрын
I did a large sed like that UT thinned it with about 25% mineral spirits and used pump up sprayer. It worked great and it was very fast.
@BoostJunkieBrian4 ай бұрын
I haven't tried it but great idea...what I have done that turns out a lot like that is take a propane torch for burning weeds and run it over the surface brings out the beautiful grain and naturally water proofs it as well...I will definitely be trying this method as well...great videos...
@angiechapman21103 ай бұрын
We have recently done this with our deck railings and new section of fence. We will definitely be doing this when we replace the rest of our deck! It always looks wet, but it's not. And it's not slippery to walk on. 👍
@Akdale7774 ай бұрын
Hmm, combustion by products and raw gas are in used motor oil. A trailer, fence posts, a shed floor...ok. my deck that my kids and grandkids play on. Nah. Likely off gassing just like the voc in stain....maybe but I'm trying to reduce exposure to chemicals so this is a no go for me. My solve was Composite. Still a synthetic but I have not touched it in 10 years. Nothings perfect I guess. I like the look though.
@myzmaria4 ай бұрын
in upstate NY we used this on siding not only for obvious benefits as you are doing but also to keep up the huge porcupines that will eat siding if not treated, and this is the best one they seem to hate, everyone uses the oil they change out of their engines and save just for this
@jamesbuchanan28404 ай бұрын
I use automatic transmission fluid mixed with diesel. A beautiful hue, no insects, and no carpenter bees. Learned it from my grandfather.
@jimmieburleigh95494 ай бұрын
Diesel works great too and you can spray it on with a bug sprayer. I kept a sprayer to use the used motor oil in cut with Diesel for fence lines and stuff like that I done regular.
@johnbrown34715 ай бұрын
70/20/10- used oil/linseed/gasoline. Used a garden spray bottle. The gas makes it dry quicker and the linseed slightly lightens/browns the colour.
@AmandaCarmack-qo7gm4 ай бұрын
Thank you!!!!!!
@scottmacpherson63144 ай бұрын
Try using used transmission oil or if you can get it used Compressor oil they have a reddish tint that really brings out the wood grains !! I use compressor oil every few years on the deck at home and the one at the lake property !! WORKS AWESOME !!! Also I use an oil spray can to apply it so quick and easy. My dad told me to do this about 25 years ago. I have done this on every deck since !!
@hayesrutherford94155 ай бұрын
Also good for equipment that lives outdoors. I undercoat rigs, my sawmill, wood truck bed, driveway, conveyor, more.
@EverythingElliott5 ай бұрын
That’s the truth. Thanks for watching!
@kevinoneill415 ай бұрын
Yes, spray metals down with ATF. Then when you want to paint it just pressure wash it let it dry for a few days and paint as usual as long as it's enamel or any oil base paint. P.S. I spray my undercarriage down each year just before winter to help with the salt and ice chemicals being used seems to work great on my 08 Ford truck. ATF.😊👍
@AmandaCarmack-qo7gm4 ай бұрын
So for your drive way, do you just do oil? Or do you add anything? Tips would be great thanks!
@scruffy46473 ай бұрын
I may have to try it on my trailers. For now, I put sawhorses on the trailer deck and use tarps for a cover. Easy to put on and remove. I have lots of trees and it's the wet leaves if not removed that rot the deck.
@vandall01604 ай бұрын
DEisel and used oil is what we have used for decades on our privacy fence posts, deck, and most definitely our trailers. It is by far more superior that any store bought preservative, repels water, and is easy to apply for the cost of diesel and the oil that would normally have to be disposed of. Makes the wood look good too.
@greatdanerescuemom14 ай бұрын
Do you mix the together or are they separate? Thank you.
@Susan700034 ай бұрын
Used diesel oil?
@bricehoogenboom64834 ай бұрын
Looks great. I used oil and deisel on my trailer. As for applying, personally, I would have done each board individually starting at the house working outward. I seem to be able to see your overlaps.
@craigmaverick5 ай бұрын
On my cedar fence I apply a 50/50 mix of used Hydraulic oil and diesel fuel. For every gallon I mix up I add a cup of dark walnut stain. No grass grows around the posts either 👍
@EverythingElliott5 ай бұрын
Now that’s some good thinkin
@MrFrankwizzal4 ай бұрын
I have a small wood storage/ table for the fire pit. I tried this method for it on the cedar top. Turned out nice looking and has held up rather well