Captainslarty
regular
Reged: 12/08/2007
Posts: 2012
Loc: Currently La Coruna Spain
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Hi all Please can someone advise the best way of cleaning years of polish, oil and gawd knows what off of previously varnished teak faced plywood. I will then lightly sand and revarnish..
Thanks Joe.
-------------------- PM me for info re SSB's etc. Bought, sold, repaired, fitted and optimised.
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misty56
regular
Reged: 16/01/2008
Posts: 74
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IF it's just to get rid of old polish and oil to freshen up a sound surface, a good wash down with sugar soap, dry, work over it thoroughly with a rag soaked in turps or white spirit. Turn the rag and rinse it out a lot, don't skimp with the turps-- the object is to remove dirt and grease, not smear it around.
Make sure you get into all the corners and cracks-- if you don't Murphy's Law states that there will be some horrible black stuff in one that your brush will pick up and spread all over your nice new varnish.
Once that's done, rub down with sandpaper on a block, wipe down with a tack rag (A sticky cloth available from paint merchants) to pick up and remove all the dust, then apply varnish per makers instructions. Note "rub down" not "sand off." The object is to get rid of any old brush-marks or light surface damage and provide a key or "tooth" for the new varnish.
If you're talking about actually removing the old varnish, the only route is nitromors or some other chemical stripper. You dare not use heat or heavy sanding, especially in an older boat where you don't know if someone else has perhaps already done this, leaving a paper-thin veneer.
If there are places where the teak veneer is damaged, or you do sand through, don't panic. Small sheets of teak veneer are available from any decent craft shop or online, and larger pieces from high-end timber merchants, the type that service the furniture trade. It's not terribly expensive. Cut round the damaged area with a a really sharp blade at 90deg to the surface then carefully remove the old veneer with a chisel sharpened as well as you can get it, cut a new piece to fit and glue it in (remember to match the grain direction.) Pros cut nice wee oval patches but that's just showing off, a diamond shape looks fine. Sand flush and finish as above.
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colmce
regular
Reged: 20/02/2004
Posts: 2895
Loc: Canterbury
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These products from Colron have worked well for me.
http://www.colron.co.uk/byproject.asp?projID=36&intext=int
Use Wax one for a surface skim, Furniture stripper if you want to be a bit more aggressive, follow instructions on cans. Nice thing about them is that used in that order they cant do any irreversible harm.
Edited by colmce (06/04/2008 17:06)
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mainmarine
regular
Reged: 30/12/2004
Posts: 1122
Loc: Notts Derbys Border Nr Junctio...
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i've just removed umpteen coats of varnish from my teak faced washboards with a cheap scraper from Wickes. It gets it off easily,the scraper has a square blade that can be rotated to give a new edge and has two different sides one coarse and one fine, it has a green plastic handle, spare blades are also available, if you don't want to sharpen it with a file. The wood scraper shown here: http://www.wickes.co.uk/bin/venda?ex=co_...earchsubmit.y=7
-------------------- Derbyshire born, Derbyshire bred. Strong in the arm, Weak in the head.
Happy sailing.
Malc
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Captainslarty
regular
Reged: 12/08/2007
Posts: 2012
Loc: Currently La Coruna Spain
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Thanks guys, a wealth of knowledge, as always !
-------------------- PM me for info re SSB's etc. Bought, sold, repaired, fitted and optimised.
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