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"nireedmot"

02/02/2006 7:42 AM

How to recover from wet-sanding a Watco finish?

Hi all-

After I applied one coat of natural Watco, my project looked *exactly*
as I
wanted it to: the grain had popped nicely and there was a low sheen to
the
surface. Then I took the advice of some of the finishing books and wet
sanded the second coat with 600 grit. Now the sheen is completely
gone. Is this because the surface of the first coat got scuffed or
because
the sanding dust is mixed in with the second coat and obscuring the
first?
Or both? I need to know whether to rub out what's there or sand it
down.
Anybody know about this problem?

Thanks.

-Tom


This topic has 4 replies

rh

"robo hippy"

in reply to "nireedmot" on 02/02/2006 7:42 AM

02/02/2006 8:14 AM

Buff it out with 0000 steel or synthetic wool, then hit it with some
good paste wax (Butchers is my favorite).
robo hippy

dd

"dadiOH"

in reply to "nireedmot" on 02/02/2006 7:42 AM

03/02/2006 2:18 PM

nireedmot wrote:
> Hi all-
>
> After I applied one coat of natural Watco, my project looked *exactly*
> as I
> wanted it to: the grain had popped nicely and there was a low sheen to
> the
> surface. Then I took the advice of some of the finishing books and wet
> sanded the second coat with 600 grit. Now the sheen is completely
> gone. Is this because the surface of the first coat got scuffed or
> because
> the sanding dust is mixed in with the second coat and obscuring the
> first?
> Or both? I need to know whether to rub out what's there or sand it
> down.
> Anybody know about this problem?

Wet sanded it with *what*? More watco, I hope. Did you wipe it off
well afrer sanding? If not, do it again. Or - as others said - use
0000 steel wool and wax.

Another possibility - you didn't wipe off enough originally leaving a
surface film which appeared shinier after drying than the finish should
be. Your wet sanding removed that surface film and it now appears as it
normally should be. I kinda suspect that is it and the wax with/without
steel wool will fix it. You only need the steel wool if the surface
feels less than baby butt smooth.


--
dadiOH
____________________________

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Lr

"Leon"

in reply to "nireedmot" on 02/02/2006 7:42 AM

02/02/2006 4:06 PM


"nireedmot" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Hi all-
>
> After I applied one coat of natural Watco, my project looked *exactly*
> as I
> wanted it to: the grain had popped nicely and there was a low sheen to
> the
> surface. Then I took the advice of some of the finishing books and wet
> sanded the second coat with 600 grit. Now the sheen is completely
> gone. Is this because the surface of the first coat got scuffed or
> because
> the sanding dust is mixed in with the second coat and obscuring the
> first?

Most likely the mix of dust on the surface now. I get reflective surfaces
when only sanding with 180 grit. I doubt that 600 would dull the shine.

DD

David

in reply to "nireedmot" on 02/02/2006 7:42 AM

02/02/2006 8:32 AM

nireedmot wrote:

> Hi all-
>
> After I applied one coat of natural Watco, my project looked *exactly*
> as I
> wanted it to: the grain had popped nicely and there was a low sheen to
> the
> surface. Then I took the advice of some of the finishing books and wet
> sanded the second coat with 600 grit. Now the sheen is completely
> gone. Is this because the surface of the first coat got scuffed or
> because
> the sanding dust is mixed in with the second coat and obscuring the
> first?
> Or both? I need to know whether to rub out what's there or sand it
> down.
> Anybody know about this problem?
>
> Thanks.
>
> -Tom
>
You can recover the sheen by buffing (dry) with purple, then gray, then
white synthetic steel wool. Those are the pads that are similar to
Scothbrite (green) pads. DON'T use the green pad!!

Dave


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