I totally understand, but on the label itself…. no where does it state that it is for the application you’re intending to do.
If it’s bare wood, you should have something that penetrates the wood grain and gets deep into it for protection. Not something that is gonna go on and dry within a few minutes and doesn’t even have enough time to penetrate let alone protect bare wood and just lay on top of the substrate. UV will go through anything, so no matter what clear you use…it will eventually stain. As for rot… all that has to happen is… one joint to split open and water get in there and your rot will begin soon after… especially according to which direction the sign is facing. The expansion and contraction deal plays the biggest part here and not many things breath… especially clearcoats the way wood does, so my bet would be going with something deep penetrating.
In your response from ClearShield….. remember one major item… they want to sell product. With this statement….
HI,
Thank you for your interest in Clearstar products. I spoke with our technical manager and he said he thought that the ClearShield would work with your wood sculpture. The basic resin is the same. I hope this info helps. I’d be afraid of this one in particular. He has nothing to lose. The guy probably never put it on wood in his life. Do you think it was ever tested as a wood product ??
Its only purpose is to protect digital prints and it might deter some action on wood, but I highly would doubt it would do any good. I’ve seen it on wood around here at the shop and on the floor where we’ve spilled it and it comes basically right up with some rubbing…. after dried.
Now, if you were talking of their product ClearJet in liquid form…. I’d be talking to you differently.