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What is the right way to refinish Teak?
I am refininshing a teak wood swim platform on an older boat. It is
the first time I have done this. I read that I should strip the old varnish, sand down the gray wood, and refinish, basically. But should I oil the teak or put more varnish on it? It is out of the water except for a few hours a week when I am actually on the water. Thanks for the benefit of anyone's experience. |
What is the right way to refinish Teak?
wrote in message ups.com... I am refininshing a teak wood swim platform on an older boat. It is the first time I have done this. I read that I should strip the old varnish, sand down the gray wood, and refinish, basically. But should I oil the teak or put more varnish on it? It is out of the water except for a few hours a week when I am actually on the water. Thanks for the benefit of anyone's experience. Several good links on this subject with great advice: http://www.boatdocs1.com/Articles_Teak.html http://www.sailnet.com/forums/gear-m...stol-teak.html |
What is the right way to refinish Teak?
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What is the right way to refinish Teak?
"Chuck Gould" wrote in message oups.com... wrote: I am refininshing a teak wood swim platform on an older boat. It is the first time I have done this. I read that I should strip the old varnish, sand down the gray wood, and refinish, basically. But should I oil the teak or put more varnish on it? It is out of the water except for a few hours a week when I am actually on the water. Thanks for the benefit of anyone's experience. Boaters will disagree on many aspects of refinishing brightwork. Some swear by oil and others by varnish. I've yet to see a varnish on teak that holds up long term other than on brightwork that is not constantly exposed to salt water. The popular Sikkens Cetol produces a phony orange color that takes away from the natural beauty of teak. I'd go with the oil. Eisboch |
What is the right way to refinish Teak?
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What is the right way to refinish Teak?
JimH wrote: Sikkens Cetol (marine) is the way to go after stripping, cleaning and sanding. Orange paint will give you the same appearance, and with less hassle than Cetol. :-) My friend has been using it on all his exposed teak for as long as I can remember, including the swim platform, with excellent results. Conversely, I had poor results with oil on the exposed teak when I had my 270 Dancer, including on the swim platform inserts. ;-) |
What is the right way to refinish Teak?
"Chuck Gould" wrote in message oups.com... JimH wrote: Sikkens Cetol (marine) is the way to go after stripping, cleaning and sanding. My friend has been using it on all his exposed teak for as long as I can remember, including the swim platform, with excellent results. Conversely, I had poor results with oil on the exposed teak when I had my 270 Dancer, including on the swim platform inserts. ;-) Orange paint will give you the same appearance, and with less hassle than Cetol. :-) Different strokes.................it is pretty popular up here where performance is perhaps more important than mild color distortions to the teak. :-) |
What is the right way to refinish Teak?
Charlie Morgan wrote: Orange paint will give you the same appearance, and with less hassle than Cetol. :-) You obviously don't know much about various finishes and how they work, Chuck. That was a very ignorant post. CWM Do make sure you offer the same persoanl observation to Eisboch, who made an identical observation about Cetol and its orange coloration further along in the thread. I've spent more time sanding, varnishing, and refinishing over the years than a lot of people have spent on the water. If you like orange decks, you'll love Cetol. Unless of course you thought that I seriously recommended orange paint (!)......in which case I'm not sure which of us would be the more ignorant. |
What is the right way to refinish Teak?
Chuck Gould wrote: Charlie Morgan wrote: Orange paint will give you the same appearance, and with less hassle than Cetol. :-) You obviously don't know much about various finishes and how they work, Chuck. That was a very ignorant post. CWM Do make sure you offer the same persoanl observation to Eisboch, who made an identical observation about Cetol and its orange coloration further along in the thread. I've spent more time sanding, varnishing, and refinishing over the years than a lot of people have spent on the water. If you like orange decks, you'll love Cetol. Unless of course you thought that I seriously recommended orange paint (!)......in which case I'm not sure which of us would be the more ignorant. PS, if you feel compelled to call everybody "ignorant" who feels that Cetol looks orange, Google up "Orange appearance Cetol". You'll get five pages of hits, I don't think any of them are me, and so you'll be busy all night. :-) |
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