BoatBanter.com

BoatBanter.com (https://www.boatbanter.com/)
-   General (https://www.boatbanter.com/general/)
-   -   Stripping Teak of Oil (https://www.boatbanter.com/general/81294-stripping-teak-oil.html)

[email protected] June 4th 07 11:46 PM

Stripping Teak of Oil
 
Hello boaters,

I am trying to remove the oil from the teak benches in my sailboat in
order to clean brighten and apply some new layers of oil. I am using
a two part cleaner, which worked well in some parts of the bench but
requires VERY vigorous scrubbing in other parts, which in turn scrubs
away a lot of the teak fibers and is giving it a rough pitted look.

Any recommendations on getting the oil off in a non-destructive manner?


Chuck Gould June 5th 07 12:55 AM

Stripping Teak of Oil
 
On Jun 4, 3:46?pm, wrote:
Hello boaters,

I am trying to remove the oil from the teak benches in my sailboat in
order to clean brighten and apply some new layers of oil. I am using
a two part cleaner, which worked well in some parts of the bench but
requires VERY vigorous scrubbing in other parts, which in turn scrubs
away a lot of the teak fibers and is giving it a rough pitted look.

Any recommendations on getting the oil off in a non-destructive manner?


Your challenge isn't so much getting it off as in getting it out. The
oil has soaked into the wood fibers, and attracted a good bit of dirt
in the process.

You will need to sand down to a point below where the oil penetrated.

A good oil job requires as much prep as a good varnish job, and a lot
more maintenance.


Jim June 5th 07 10:31 PM

Stripping Teak of Oil
 
Chuck Gould wrote:
On Jun 4, 3:46?pm, wrote:

Hello boaters,

I am trying to remove the oil from the teak benches in my sailboat in
order to clean brighten and apply some new layers of oil. I am using
a two part cleaner, which worked well in some parts of the bench but
requires VERY vigorous scrubbing in other parts, which in turn scrubs
away a lot of the teak fibers and is giving it a rough pitted look.

Any recommendations on getting the oil off in a non-destructive manner?



Your challenge isn't so much getting it off as in getting it out. The
oil has soaked into the wood fibers, and attracted a good bit of dirt
in the process.

You will need to sand down to a point below where the oil penetrated.

A good oil job requires as much prep as a good varnish job, and a lot
more maintenance.

Sudsy Ammonia from the 99 cent store. The best teak cleaner there is.

Chuck Gould June 6th 07 01:13 AM

Stripping Teak of Oil
 
On Jun 5, 2:31?pm, Jim wrote:
Chuck Gould wrote:
On Jun 4, 3:46?pm, wrote:


Hello boaters,


I am trying to remove the oil from the teak benches in my sailboat in
order to clean brighten and apply some new layers of oil. I am using
a two part cleaner, which worked well in some parts of the bench but
requires VERY vigorous scrubbing in other parts, which in turn scrubs
away a lot of the teak fibers and is giving it a rough pitted look.


Any recommendations on getting the oil off in a non-destructive manner?


Your challenge isn't so much getting it off as in getting it out. The
oil has soaked into the wood fibers, and attracted a good bit of dirt
in the process.


You will need to sand down to a point below where the oil penetrated.


A good oil job requires as much prep as a good varnish job, and a lot
more maintenance.


Sudsy Ammonia from the 99 cent store. The best teak cleaner there is.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Be sure to test it on a small spot, especially if there are any
caulked joints. Don't know about ammonia, but bleach destroys caulk. I
once followed some free advice to clean teak using Tide with Bleach.
Cleaned and brightened the teak very nicely, just as promised. Also
screwed up the caulk.



All times are GMT +1. The time now is 02:44 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 BoatBanter.com