Comodave
Moderator Emeritus
- Joined
- Jul 2, 2015
- Messages
- 22,444
- Location
- Au Gres, MI
- Vessel Name
- Black Dog
- Vessel Make
- Formula 41PC
I use a multitool to sand in the corners.
Cetol is soft. It is not hard enough for floors.Our finish is completely burned through in several places. No choice but to completely sand and refinish. Recoating would be a sweet sweet choice otherwise. Bare wood will be hard to obtain.
I was going to use Cetol Natural Teak 'cause I have it on board already and it looks like it will be close to the finish on the surrounding cabinets. I was wondering which poly you used?
And I just stopped and bought a random orbital sander at Home Desperate this evening with a bunch of 60 grit pads. I'll use my finish sander after that with 80 and 120. This was my next attempt as 4 hours with a heat gun only stripped about a quarter of the salon and I'm getting old enough that the knees aint what they used to be.
So we have a Grand Banks with teak parquet floors that were in poor condition. After doing some research found that GB used epoxy as a base coat. So...very difficult to remove. We used a belt sander followed by multiple random orbital sander passes finishing with 220 grit. We than applied two coats of west system epoxy using 207 clear hardener with 105. Followed with three coats of varnish of your choice. Looks identical to original and bullet proof.
The abranet mesh disks work well - less clogging and better dust collection with the right vac.
https://www.mirka.com/abrasives/abrasives-by-name/
Does anyone know a source for the teak parquet tiles? I know I'm going to have to replace a few.. Preferably in the central east coast of Florida.
---------------
George
I looked for parquet tiles that matched ours in 2012 and contacted:
MARITIME Wood Products Corp. in Stuart, Florida USA 34997
(800) 274-TEAK www.TeakDecks.com mail@maritimewoodproducts.com
Unfortunately, our pattern is Haddon Hall Basket Weave which they don't carry any more. Friends luckily found a couple of large panels of parquet to match theirs as salvage at a chandlery. Good luck!
Is it possible to do a floor in sections and still get a seamless finished look? We have free-standing furniture that would be a lot of work to disassemble to get it out of the saloon.
Use a random orbit sander only. Never use a belt sander anywhere on your boat! I start with about 100 grit and go to about 200 then varnish with the poly shown.
Inside corners are done with a vibrating sander.
I used this on my parquet about 6 years ago and it still looks great. If you need to touch it up just hit the spot or wear area with 220 on a random orbit and then receipt.
This is my first successful post with a picture, Ill figure out how to turn it later
pete
This is going to be slightly embarraassing because I thought I did my homework. This Varathane product was used by the contractor on refinishing my teak parquet, I wanted something durable with 2 dogs aboard. It looks great, but problem is, the product won't kick/flash off. So far, 3 coats in the salon. I can't be onboard longer than an hour without getting a headache. Talked to the manufacturer who said it needs about 70 degrees for a few days to fully cure. I have heaters/fans running, moved out of the boat to my friends RV. Any suggestions?
Okay, so finally finished with this job and thought I'd post up how it turned out.
For stripping I bought a ~$50 Makita 5" orbital sander from Home Desperate and used up 10 #60 grit pads followed by $80 and #120. It took a good long time, like maybe 8 hours just sanding. Toe kick and corners were done with a Mouse sander with 80 grit.
The admiral then spent 3 hours cleaning. The ceiling and walls with water dampened towels. The floor by vacuuming followed by mineral spirit soaked towels.
The finish came out with a lot of dust in it. I mean we cleaned and cleaned, but my brush was picking up junk from between the parquet pieces. I guess I would have needed to wire brush those out with a vacuum to fix that problem.
Oh and 4 Dana hairs somehow were encased in perpetuity. No idea how, but she has definitely left her mark.
I used a good brush and sanded lightly between coats but you could still see very visible brush marks across the grain on half the tiles. I would try a wool applicator next time maybe? The poly just didn't seem to flow out well.
I was at the Seattle boat show last weekend and talked to some finish experts there. What they offered up was to use a 2 part epoxy finish and flow it out quickly on a colder day.
In other words, nothing definitive, I just wasn't happy with it. Looks like shoddy work yet I worked my ass off.
Thanks to all the people here! I really appreciate everyone chipping in with ideas and info.
For future reference, there are 2-part water based products like Street Shoe that are incredibly durable and cure very quickly. In commercial applications, oil based polyurethane is rarely used anymore. There are just simply better products available, even for high traffic commercial applications.