C

"Contrarian"

27/09/2011 11:21 AM

sandpaper requirements estimating



Is there any rule of thumb for estimating how much sandpaper
is needed for say, a 1 sq. yard of surface?

Am refinishing a salvaged/gift table, and it is taking more
than I thought. For one thing the sandpaper gums up with little
clots all the time.

TIA


This topic has 7 replies

Ll

Leon

in reply to "Contrarian" on 27/09/2011 11:21 AM

27/09/2011 6:57 AM

On 9/27/2011 6:55 AM, Leon wrote:
> On 9/27/2011 6:21 AM, Contrarian wrote:
>> Is there any rule of thumb for estimating how much sandpaper
>> is needed for say, a 1 sq. yard of surface?
>>
>> Am refinishing a salvaged/gift table, and it is taking more
>> than I thought. For one thing the sandpaper gums up with little
>> clots all the time.
>>
>> TIA
>
> Like most consumables it can be difficult to determine how much of what
> you are going to need.
>
> Given that however it sounds like you may need to do a bit of research
> into the different types of sand paper. I would suggest that if your
> paper is gumming up that you are probably using the wrong type paper for
> what you are trying to accomplish. I would assume that you are trying to
> remove the old finish which requires a different type paper to prevent
> loading up and or the guming up that you are witnessing.
>
> Several months ago I was doing a lot of sanding to remove glue from
> drawer joints which alsp had protruding domino tenons that needed to be
> sanded flush. There was basically no way to scrape off the excess glue.
> I was having to change my paper for each drawer and I had about 12
> drawers to sand. I changed paper after the second drawer and that third
> piece of paper very successfully completed the remaining 10 drawers with
> no more paper changes.
>

I changed paper after the second drawer and that third
piece of paper very successfully completed the remaining 10 drawers with
no more paper changes.


Male that, I changed the type of paper on the third drawer.

Ll

Leon

in reply to "Contrarian" on 27/09/2011 11:21 AM

27/09/2011 6:55 AM

On 9/27/2011 6:21 AM, Contrarian wrote:
> Is there any rule of thumb for estimating how much sandpaper
> is needed for say, a 1 sq. yard of surface?
>
> Am refinishing a salvaged/gift table, and it is taking more
> than I thought. For one thing the sandpaper gums up with little
> clots all the time.
>
> TIA

Like most consumables it can be difficult to determine how much of what
you are going to need.

Given that however it sounds like you may need to do a bit of research
into the different types of sand paper. I would suggest that if your
paper is gumming up that you are probably using the wrong type paper for
what you are trying to accomplish. I would assume that you are trying
to remove the old finish which requires a different type paper to
prevent loading up and or the guming up that you are witnessing.

Several months ago I was doing a lot of sanding to remove glue from
drawer joints which alsp had protruding domino tenons that needed to be
sanded flush. There was basically no way to scrape off the excess glue.
I was having to change my paper for each drawer and I had about 12
drawers to sand. I changed paper after the second drawer and that third
piece of paper very successfully completed the remaining 10 drawers with
no more paper changes.

Ll

Leon

in reply to "Contrarian" on 27/09/2011 11:21 AM

27/09/2011 8:01 AM

On 9/27/2011 7:46 AM, Contrarian wrote:
> Leon<lcb11211@swbelldotnet> wrote:
>> On 9/27/2011 6:21 AM, Contrarian wrote:
>>> Is there any rule of thumb for estimating how much sandpaper
>>> is needed for say, a 1 sq. yard of surface?
>
>> Given that however it sounds like you may need to do a bit of research
>> into the different types of sand paper. I would suggest that if your
>> paper is gumming up that you are probably using the wrong type paper for
>> what you are trying to accomplish. I would assume that you are trying
>> to remove the old finish which requires a different type paper to
>> prevent loading up and or the guming up that you are witnessing.
>
> there was no visible finish on this, it had been stripped. some patches
> were clearly dry plain wood.
>
>> Several months ago I was doing a lot of sanding to remove glue from
>> drawer joints which alsp had protruding domino tenons that needed to be
>> sanded flush. There was basically no way to scrape off the excess glue.
>> I was having to change my paper for each drawer and I had about 12
>> drawers to sand. I changed paper after the second drawer and that third
>> piece of paper very successfully completed the remaining 10 drawers with
>> no more paper changes.
>
> Had tried more than one kind, but it's good to hear some last longer
> than one drawer.

Consider also that a piece of sand paper in a sander can have a
reasonable life expectancy of 5~10 minutes.

Still if you have paper that is guming up that typically is not caused
by sanding dust alone unless you are working on a very oily wood.

C

"Contrarian"

in reply to "Contrarian" on 27/09/2011 11:21 AM

27/09/2011 12:44 PM

Larry Jaques <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Tue, 27 Sep 2011 11:21:22 +0000 (UTC),
> "Contrarian"<[email protected]> wrote:

>>Is there any rule of thumb for estimating how much sandpaper

> One cabinetmaker's scraper.

yes!

C

"Contrarian"

in reply to "Contrarian" on 27/09/2011 11:21 AM

27/09/2011 12:46 PM

Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet> wrote:
> On 9/27/2011 6:21 AM, Contrarian wrote:
>> Is there any rule of thumb for estimating how much sandpaper
>> is needed for say, a 1 sq. yard of surface?

> Given that however it sounds like you may need to do a bit of research
> into the different types of sand paper. I would suggest that if your
> paper is gumming up that you are probably using the wrong type paper for
> what you are trying to accomplish. I would assume that you are trying
> to remove the old finish which requires a different type paper to
> prevent loading up and or the guming up that you are witnessing.

there was no visible finish on this, it had been stripped. some patches
were clearly dry plain wood.

> Several months ago I was doing a lot of sanding to remove glue from
> drawer joints which alsp had protruding domino tenons that needed to be
> sanded flush. There was basically no way to scrape off the excess glue.
> I was having to change my paper for each drawer and I had about 12
> drawers to sand. I changed paper after the second drawer and that third
> piece of paper very successfully completed the remaining 10 drawers with
> no more paper changes.

Had tried more than one kind, but it's good to hear some last longer
than one drawer.

Tn

"Twayne"

in reply to "Contrarian" on 27/09/2011 11:21 AM

28/09/2011 9:36 AM

In news:[email protected],
Contrarian <[email protected]> typed:
> Is there any rule of thumb for estimating how much
> sandpaper is needed for say, a 1 sq. yard of surface?
>
> Am refinishing a salvaged/gift table, and it is taking
> more than I thought. For one thing the sandpaper gums up
> with little clots all the time.
>
> TIA

Depends; there are lots of kinds of sandpaper for different uses. You're
either doing it wrong or using the wrong paper. READ the USES on the ads &
jackets.

LJ

Larry Jaques

in reply to "Contrarian" on 27/09/2011 11:21 AM

27/09/2011 4:52 AM

On Tue, 27 Sep 2011 11:21:22 +0000 (UTC),
"Contrarian"<[email protected]> wrote:

>
>
>Is there any rule of thumb for estimating how much sandpaper
>is needed for say, a 1 sq. yard of surface?

One cabinetmaker's scraper.


>Am refinishing a salvaged/gift table, and it is taking more
>than I thought. For one thing the sandpaper gums up with little
>clots all the time.

Use stripper, then finish-sand or scrape.

--
Live in the sunshine, swim the sea, drink the wild air…
-- Ralph Waldo Emerson


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