Extracare
25th March 2008, 10:49 AM
Good job for a DIYer and can make a huge difference to the appearance of a house or just a room.
1. Remove all furniture etc.
2. Clean floor thouroughly with a 50/50 water/metho or water/thinners mix. Use a mask if using thinners. Scrub the corners and along benches etc as grime collects here. Scrub dirt out of scratches with a scraper if necessary. The fresh ploy will fill the scratch somewhat, but won't hide dirt!!
3. Sand the existing poly using 180 grit paper. Use a buffer if you have access or spend a day on your knees with the half sheet. Wear a mask!!
4. Vaccum all benchtops, window ledges etc. This is the dust that will drop into your fresh new floor.
5. Vaccum the floor. Do it twice and use the brush around the walls. Every speck that you get now is a speck you wont have in your floor.
6. Plan how you will get out of the room. Lay out plastic for you to step onto on your exit. You will likely be sticky and flustered. Don't risk your carpet or decking with wet polyurethane!!
7. Get a good 75mm brush and a 9mm nap 230mm mohair roller on a pole. A brush pot and a bucket that fits the roller.
8. block any windows that direct sun will come through. If the coating cures in sunlight you will get an uneven satin.
9. Using Polycure's Supersatin brush a good heavy coat down the far wall and out across about 5 boards. Use a 9mm mohair roller to cover the 5 board run with approx 2 good roller dips. Once covered - run the roller down the length of the boards smoothing the coating.
10. Work your way across the room, getting down low occasionally to check you haven't missed anything.
11. Once finished - leave the house for 24 hours before going back to inspect your handiwork.
A few tips:
Check the compatibility of the Polycure Supersatin in a corner (out of sight) before you do the whole room.
Always use surgical rubber gloves and a gas filter mask.
Tape the bottom of cabinet kickers if you are worried about splattering them
Make sure there are no naked flame pilot lights etc in the house - those fumes are flammable.
Stay calm. If you spot a blob of fluff half way across the floor you have already coated, leave it. You can cut it of the floor tomorrow with a sharp stanley blade.
Expect the floor to look 90% perfect. It's a floor not a table top.
Would be good if others add their tips etc.:U
1. Remove all furniture etc.
2. Clean floor thouroughly with a 50/50 water/metho or water/thinners mix. Use a mask if using thinners. Scrub the corners and along benches etc as grime collects here. Scrub dirt out of scratches with a scraper if necessary. The fresh ploy will fill the scratch somewhat, but won't hide dirt!!
3. Sand the existing poly using 180 grit paper. Use a buffer if you have access or spend a day on your knees with the half sheet. Wear a mask!!
4. Vaccum all benchtops, window ledges etc. This is the dust that will drop into your fresh new floor.
5. Vaccum the floor. Do it twice and use the brush around the walls. Every speck that you get now is a speck you wont have in your floor.
6. Plan how you will get out of the room. Lay out plastic for you to step onto on your exit. You will likely be sticky and flustered. Don't risk your carpet or decking with wet polyurethane!!
7. Get a good 75mm brush and a 9mm nap 230mm mohair roller on a pole. A brush pot and a bucket that fits the roller.
8. block any windows that direct sun will come through. If the coating cures in sunlight you will get an uneven satin.
9. Using Polycure's Supersatin brush a good heavy coat down the far wall and out across about 5 boards. Use a 9mm mohair roller to cover the 5 board run with approx 2 good roller dips. Once covered - run the roller down the length of the boards smoothing the coating.
10. Work your way across the room, getting down low occasionally to check you haven't missed anything.
11. Once finished - leave the house for 24 hours before going back to inspect your handiwork.
A few tips:
Check the compatibility of the Polycure Supersatin in a corner (out of sight) before you do the whole room.
Always use surgical rubber gloves and a gas filter mask.
Tape the bottom of cabinet kickers if you are worried about splattering them
Make sure there are no naked flame pilot lights etc in the house - those fumes are flammable.
Stay calm. If you spot a blob of fluff half way across the floor you have already coated, leave it. You can cut it of the floor tomorrow with a sharp stanley blade.
Expect the floor to look 90% perfect. It's a floor not a table top.
Would be good if others add their tips etc.:U