I was recently redoing my hardwood floor and I had just coated the
first layer of poly and used a buffer with a screen to abraid the
surface to put a second coat. In the process the screen cut to
aggresively in some spots and whent through the finish and a little bit
of the stain causing a blotchy appearance. Any suggestions short of
redoing the entire project.
[email protected] wrote:
> I was recently redoing my hardwood floor and I had just coated the
> first layer of poly and used a buffer with a screen to abraid the
> surface to put a second coat. In the process the screen cut to
> aggresively in some spots and whent through the finish and a little bit
> of the stain causing a blotchy appearance. Any suggestions short of
> redoing the entire project.
If you sanded off the finish and stain, I think you are in for a
strip/refinish unless you can live with the appearance of different
colors of stain where you have restained before recoating. Since the
wood has had a coating on it, the resins/oils that the coating has left
behing will leave large witness lines around evey area you
restain/recoat.
Robert
The best hope is to try and use some toned (colored) finish. Take some
of the same poly and add some transtint or other dye abut 1/2 as dark
as the original stain. Hand apply very thin cotas and hand sand it out
and try to feather the edges. A few coats to build up to a similar
color and with a lot of luck and skill you "might" save the day.
I can pull this off about 1/3 of the time. I had one success on a table
top recently but had to completly redo a drawer on the same project.
[email protected] wrote:
> I was recently redoing my hardwood floor and I had just coated the
> first layer of poly and used a buffer with a screen to abraid the
> surface to put a second coat. In the process the screen cut to
> aggresively in some spots and whent through the finish and a little bit
> of the stain causing a blotchy appearance. Any suggestions short of
> redoing the entire project.
SonomaProducts.com wrote:
> The best hope is to try and use some toned (colored) finish. Take some
> of the same poly and add some transtint or other dye abut 1/2 as dark
> as the original stain. Hand apply very thin cotas and hand sand it out
> and try to feather the edges. A few coats to build up to a similar
> color and with a lot of luck and skill you "might" save the day.
>
> I can pull this off about 1/3 of the time. I had one success on a table
> top recently but had to completly redo a drawer on the same project.
>
Sigh... it almost never works for me. *Especially* not with anything
poly. After consulting the manufacturer rep, I don't sand between
coats anymore when using poly. BUT, I do not do floors unless it is
just a room or two.
Although the manufacturer's rep had some problem with this, method, I
do not. If brushing, I do not thin. If spraying, I thin as needed.
But in any event, I get s second coat on in no more than 8 hours before
the first coat is applied. No sanding.
Same with the third coat, if needed.
But timing is everything. I couldn't do it if it were a weekend
project as I would have to time too carefully. But since it is what I
do as part of my biz, I can put a coat on first thing in the morning,
then one at the end of the day.
If I am spraying, I put a thinned tack coat on, then about thirty
minutes or so later I put on a really heavy coat. Heavy for me anyway.
It probably isn't more than about 4 mil. If applied thirty to forty
five minutes, though, it will bond easily to the first coat to get a
nice film build. Often times that puts enough hide on something
(doors, heavy use table tops, etc. that benefit from poly) to get a
good finish on it. If it needs more, it is easy to scuff sand that
much finish without going through to apply more finish.
Robert