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Plastic Stickers Don't Stain New Haven CT

For strength, you can use 1-1/4-in.-i.d. Schedule-80 rigid PVC electrical conduit. Available from home centers and electrical supply stores, it costs about $12 for a 10-ft. length. Schedule-40 rigid PVC conduit is much less expensive but thinner-walled, so it doesn’t support as much weight.

Naugatuck Valley Hardwoods
203-758-7222
Prospect, CT
The Home Depot
(203)248-5925
1873 Dixwell Avenue
Hamden, CT
Lowe's
(203) 468-3068
115 Foxon Blvd.
New Haven, CT
The Home Depot
(203)467-2001
75 North Frontage Road
East Haven, CT
The Home Depot
(203)234-1300
111 Universal Drive N
North Haven, CT
The Wood Rack
203-481-4505
40 North East Industrial Road
Branford, CT
Colony Hardware- New Haven
(203) 466-5252
15 Stiles Street New Haven, CT, 06511
New Haven, CT
LOWE'S OF NEW HAVEN, CONN.
203 468-3068
115 FOXON BLVD. NEW HAVEN, CT, 06513
New Haven, CT
Harvey Industries
(800) 882-8959
260 Bradley St East Haven, CT, 06512
East Haven, CT
Lowe's
(203) 891-2038
50 Boston Post Road
Orange, CT
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Plastic Stickers Don't Stain

Plastic Stickers Don't Stain

I use plastic conduit to make stickers for stacking and drying my wood. These stickers provide consistent spacing and excellent air circulation with minimal contact. I’ve never had problems with insects, mold or staining, which can occur around wooden stickers, especially when the wood is green and the air is damp.

For strength, I use 1-1/4-in.-i.d. Schedule-80 rigid PVC electrical conduit. Available from home centers and electrical supply stores, it costs about $12 for a 10-ft. length. Schedule-40 rigid PVC conduit is much less expensive but thinner-walled, so it doesn’t support as much weight. I only use it for small stacks. Both Schedule-40 and Schedule-80 rigid PVC conduit are suitable for indoor and outdoor use.

After cutting the conduit to sticker lengths, I cut them in half on my bandsaw, using a simple jig to hold the sticker in position (see photo, above). To keep the conduit from rotating during the cut, I follow a straight line drawn on its surface. To draw the line, I simply lay a flat board next the conduit and use the board as a straightedge.

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