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![]() "Joe" wrote in message ups.com... You should rip all the outside wood off so you do not have to so much work maintaining it. Replace your hand holds and trim with Steel! Stainless hand holds???... in my climate?.... no thanks! I've been aboard a friend's steel boat here in the winter.... the damn thing was insulated and it was still cold. That said, I have solid mahogany spreaders, I sand and varnish them about every other year. A fun summer day project. If I had teak deck Id let em go gray. I used Cetol last time I did my spreaders and the celtol seems to hold up longer than varnish, yet varnish looks way better. 8-10 coats of varnish is the way to go, wet sanding with 600 grit Norton sandpaper between every coat. My whole interior is phillipino & hondouran mahogany with 8 hand sanded coats of Epifanes Varnish, It took that many coats because I selected mahogany mith intense mudulley rays that are very porious and sucked in the varnish. I've used a special Tung oil from Lee Valley.... it has additives that produce a hard glossy surface. I haven't tried it yet on my boat but I might this year. The stuff is expensive... $13 for 500ml. It showed excellent results on the roll-top table I refurbished a couple of years ago... but I don't know if it will last under outdoor conditions. CM |
#2
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![]() "Capt. Mooron" wrote in message Stainless hand holds???... in my climate?.... no thanks! I've been aboard a friend's steel boat here in the winter.... the damn thing was insulated and it was still cold. Yeah, but think of the built-in watermaker you have during humid weather. The condensation on the interior hull topsides could probably fill a gallon bottle by noon. Max |
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