Why did plywood go mouldy? And what should I do?

Why did plywood go mouldy? And what should I do?

Author
Discussion

Norfolkandchance

Original Poster:

2,015 posts

200 months

Sunday 6th January 2019
quotequote all
Hi,

During the summer I made a work top and some shelves from 18mm plywood and installed them in my garage. I didn't put any finish on. It has developed black mould in spots. Its not an especially damp garage but it isn't as dry as the house. I keep books and magazines for example, without problem. Also lots of other bare pine and MDF, which hasn't gone moudy and has been in there for years. Any idea why the mould came on the ply and not the other wood (or paper etc?)

Today I did my best to clean it off with bleach solution and got to a point where it won't really show once I varnish it. Will a coat of floor varnish stop it coming back?

Ta


Norfolkandchance

Original Poster:

2,015 posts

200 months

Sunday 13th January 2019
quotequote all
Out of interest, why does it need to be sanded - I've removed most of the mould by scrubbing with bleach and they are only garage shelves / work tops.

Norfolkandchance

Original Poster:

2,015 posts

200 months

Wednesday 16th January 2019
quotequote all
jakesmith said:
singlecoil said:
Osmo Poly-x oil is a good alternative to varnish and easier to apply, although it takes longer to dry. Neither particularly need sanding unless there are traces of the mould remaining, though I've never applied finish over mould so don't know whether it absolutely needs to be removed.
This is a great suggestion, I used it on our doors and oak staircase it brings it up beautifully and really emphasises the grain, it even makes plain plywood look great. You can slap it on too. It's not the cheapest but it's so easy to use and looks great
I've ordered some, then remembered it was just for garage shelf and cancelled it and bought £8 worth of varnish instead. Thanks for the tip though!

Norfolkandchance

Original Poster:

2,015 posts

200 months

Thursday 17th January 2019
quotequote all
singlecoil said:
I hope you bought water based varnish, not polyurethane.
Yes, the truth is that it isn't cherished. Interesting that its even gone mouldy as pine and paper in the same garage didin't. So I'm only varnishing to stop the mould coming back after the bleach killed it.




Edited by Norfolkandchance on Thursday 17th January 07:23

Norfolkandchance

Original Poster:

2,015 posts

200 months

Sunday 27th January 2019
quotequote all
Interestingly, the (water based) varnish I bought says "do not use below 10 degrees C". I first read this as "do not apply below 10" but am now wondering, because it also says "do not use on decking and floors" if it is unsuitable for the garage, which is below 10 quite often.

What might happen if I apply it and then temps go below 10?

thanks