One nice thing about retirement is that you have time for OCD (Obsessive Compulsive Disorder) projects. My reloading/gun cleaning benches are 45 - 50 years old. The surfaces have been exposed to numerous moves, repurposing as work benches, various oils and chemicals, and peeling due to tape removal. All-in-all they were looking pretty shabby.
I have used a plastic-coated freezer paper on the surfaces for a couple of years, but the paper isn't very durable, and the plastic coating is too thin for good protection from cleaning fluids. Periodically, I have to replace the paper. The time to replace the paper has been past due for months now and I hate having to do the same job twice. So, I started thinking about refinishing the surfaces. I decided to sand them down and put a thick, clear, gloss polyurethane finish on them. But, before I did that, I put some polyurethane finish on a piece of scrap board to test how well the polyurethane would stand up to gun cleaning chemicals. I was surprised that nearly everything I tested (including rubbing alcohol) softened the polyurethane. So that idea was busted.
This is what I came up with. Sheets of "Plexi-glass" or more correctly clear acrylic sheet over the white plastic-coated freezer paper. I tested all of my cleaning chemical on it and only carburetor cleaner seemed to cloud it, but I don't use carb cleaner in the house - only outside or in the barn.

Now I can go back to my load development projects.
I have used a plastic-coated freezer paper on the surfaces for a couple of years, but the paper isn't very durable, and the plastic coating is too thin for good protection from cleaning fluids. Periodically, I have to replace the paper. The time to replace the paper has been past due for months now and I hate having to do the same job twice. So, I started thinking about refinishing the surfaces. I decided to sand them down and put a thick, clear, gloss polyurethane finish on them. But, before I did that, I put some polyurethane finish on a piece of scrap board to test how well the polyurethane would stand up to gun cleaning chemicals. I was surprised that nearly everything I tested (including rubbing alcohol) softened the polyurethane. So that idea was busted.
This is what I came up with. Sheets of "Plexi-glass" or more correctly clear acrylic sheet over the white plastic-coated freezer paper. I tested all of my cleaning chemical on it and only carburetor cleaner seemed to cloud it, but I don't use carb cleaner in the house - only outside or in the barn.

Now I can go back to my load development projects.



