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#1
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We're starting to get the boat ready for another season of sailing, and
I would appreciate some advice as to pros/cons of various products for refinishing exterior wood - Cetol, varnish with UV protection, and polyurethane varnish with UV protection. Which is most suitable for wood trim in the cockpit and on deck, teak cockpit table, rungs on swim ladder (will be submerged in salt water when the ladder is down), plywood dinghy flooring (will also be somewhat submerged during use and also rainstorms), etc. The manufacturers' recommendations seem to be more advertising than practical advice. Since all of these finishes will be applied with a brush, the main concern seems to be durability for the different applications. -Nancy |
#2
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... We're starting to get the boat ready for another season of sailing, and I would appreciate some advice as to pros/cons of various products for refinishing exterior wood - Cetol, varnish with UV protection, and polyurethane varnish with UV protection. Which is most suitable for wood trim in the cockpit and on deck, teak cockpit table, rungs on swim ladder (will be submerged in salt water when the ladder is down), plywood dinghy flooring (will also be somewhat submerged during use and also rainstorms), etc. The manufacturers' recommendations seem to be more advertising than practical advice. Since all of these finishes will be applied with a brush, the main concern seems to be durability for the different applications. A couple of weeks back one of our contributors (dadiOH) provided two links, artfully entitled 'myth dispelling links' which I found very informative. They cut through the advert blurb and after reading them you'll know all about varnishes! http://www.taunton.com/finewoodworking/pages/w00063.asp http://www.woodfinishingsupplies.com/varnish.htm -- JimB http://www.jimbaerselman.f2s.com/ Describing some Greek and Spanish cruising areas |
#3
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wrote in message
oups.com... - Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - We're starting to get the boat ready for another season of sailing, and I would appreciate some advice as to pros/cons of various products for refinishing exterior wood - Cetol, varnish with UV protection, and polyurethane varnish with UV protection. Which is most suitable for wood trim in the cockpit and on deck, teak cockpit table, rungs on swim ladder (will be submerged in salt water when the ladder is down), plywood dinghy flooring (will also be somewhat submerged during use and also rainstorms), etc. The manufacturers' recommendations seem to be more advertising than practical advice. Since all of these finishes will be applied with a brush, the main concern seems to be durability for the different applications. A couple of weeks back one of our contributors (dadiOH) provided two links, artfully entitled 'myth dispelling links' which I found very informative. They cut through the advert blurb and after reading them you'll know all about varnishes! http://www.taunton.com/finewoodworking/pages/w00063.asp http://www.woodfinishingsupplies.com/varnish.htm -- JimB http://www.jimbaerselman.f2s.com/ Describing some Greek and Spanish cruising areas Thanks, Jim. I think I am sold on varnish over Cetol, but when/why should you use polyurethane varnish instead of the "regular" stuff? The local boat store sells both varieties under the Goldspar label. |
#4
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![]() Thanks, Jim. I think I am sold on varnish over Cetol, but when/why should you use polyurethane varnish instead of the "regular" stuff? The local boat store sells both varieties under the Goldspar label. You'll find as many opinions about polyurethane varnish vs "regular" varnish as fish in the sea. I'm personally a "regular" guy (no cracks). My experiences with two part poly were not very satisfactory. It was more critical to apply, and when it aged, it came off in sheets. Now this may have been bad application in my part . . . but there is a general consensus that 2 part poly is not very good with UV. One part polyurethane I haven't used. Again, I understand it is not so resistant to UV, though you will find it sold in "exterior" grades. "Regular" exterior grades I've used on everything on the boat (except the bathing ladder steps and the deck - both teak - unprotected). OK, you need lots of coats (6) first time round, but it's easy to touch up, and adding an extra coat or two after a light rub down for the next season is a doddle. -- JimB http://www.jimbaerselman.f2s.com/ Describing some Greek and Spanish cruising areas |
#5
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I would use Cetol on any surface that you need traction like ladders,
wood dink floors, etc. That being said, the teak decks on my boat are just plain, no finish whatsoever. For rails and brightwork that you want to look nice but not walk on, I use Honey Teak by Signature finish. VERY durable and pretty but a little hard to put on the first time. Follow the directions exactly. After that, just a coat or two of clear every 12-18 months is fine. http://www.fabulainc.com/ It's a polyurethane, BTW. |
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