Hello,
Floundering non-professional here. I am restoring some 1930s wooden casement windows (i.e. "casement sashes" attached to the fixed frame with vertical hinges) in my house. This involves replacing the panes of glass with vacuum glazing and also routing a groove round the outer edges to put weatherstrip seal into (AQ21).
So this involves routing with a 3 mm groover bit, for a thickness of the weatherstrip (the thin part, the "tail" of the profile) of (officially) 2.7 mm. In fact the profile of the recess is more complicated than that if you want to install a "brush seal", but that's not important for this question.
The fit of the weaterstrip tail into that groove is obviously quite snug - I have already done some experiments without paint. Therefore I'm currently intending to just apply one coat in that groove before pushing in the tail of the weatherstrip. All the rest of the frame I can just apply a better arrangement, i.e. separate primer, undercoat and paint, probably.
But window frames are pretty exposed to weather, and you obviously don't want them to absorb moisture and expand.
Any recommendation for this one-coat paint to apply in the groove? I saw this thread. I understand so far from my research that "primer undercoat" is always water-based. But I assume (although this may be wrong) that oil-based paint would probably be better for maximum water-resistance, over many years. Is there any oil-based primer which would do this job? ... bearing in mind of course that the presence of this weatherstrip tail will hopefully be pretty good at keeping out the moisture.
In general, if this were your house, what would you apply in that groove? Oil-based white wood primer, on its own? Or something else?
PS any recommendations for the rest of the frame would also be welcome, bearing in mind that the frames are mostly already covered in paint (probably the original paint of the 1930s: sometimes bare wood is revealed, but all the wood is sound), and I have yet to try and research what the best way to approach that is. Sandtex seem to be pretty highly recommended paints...
Floundering non-professional here. I am restoring some 1930s wooden casement windows (i.e. "casement sashes" attached to the fixed frame with vertical hinges) in my house. This involves replacing the panes of glass with vacuum glazing and also routing a groove round the outer edges to put weatherstrip seal into (AQ21).
So this involves routing with a 3 mm groover bit, for a thickness of the weatherstrip (the thin part, the "tail" of the profile) of (officially) 2.7 mm. In fact the profile of the recess is more complicated than that if you want to install a "brush seal", but that's not important for this question.
The fit of the weaterstrip tail into that groove is obviously quite snug - I have already done some experiments without paint. Therefore I'm currently intending to just apply one coat in that groove before pushing in the tail of the weatherstrip. All the rest of the frame I can just apply a better arrangement, i.e. separate primer, undercoat and paint, probably.
But window frames are pretty exposed to weather, and you obviously don't want them to absorb moisture and expand.
Any recommendation for this one-coat paint to apply in the groove? I saw this thread. I understand so far from my research that "primer undercoat" is always water-based. But I assume (although this may be wrong) that oil-based paint would probably be better for maximum water-resistance, over many years. Is there any oil-based primer which would do this job? ... bearing in mind of course that the presence of this weatherstrip tail will hopefully be pretty good at keeping out the moisture.
In general, if this were your house, what would you apply in that groove? Oil-based white wood primer, on its own? Or something else?
PS any recommendations for the rest of the frame would also be welcome, bearing in mind that the frames are mostly already covered in paint (probably the original paint of the 1930s: sometimes bare wood is revealed, but all the wood is sound), and I have yet to try and research what the best way to approach that is. Sandtex seem to be pretty highly recommended paints...

