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  1. #1
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    Default Sanding prior to staining

    I've just been reading a tin of commercial stain. The recommendation is to sand with 120 grit sand paper and then to sand again thoroughly with 400 grit paper before applyng the stain. Really? I have never even seen 400 grit paper, but judging from P240 it must feel like photocopy paper (smooth)... What o others here think? Does anyone know what dressed timber of the sort that you get in the hardware stores is finished to? Sanding must be the least rewarding part of any job... but if you don't do it right, well....

  2. #2
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    I'll give you an example. I used to sand to 80 then 120. Definitely made SWMBO happy. Then I started sanding to 400 and now I sand to 1200. Many many oohs and ahhs later I pretty much sand to 1200 I am looking to get some even finer sandpaper to see if I can increase brownie points.
    oh and no skipping steps I run through the lot. In the finer paper it sometimes is as quick as thirty seconds work and move up.
    if the finish is important the sanding is too. If not then not.
    Extra Info

  3. #3
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    If you want the finish you have to do the work. The reward will be long admiration of your work that will last longer than the memory of the effort applied.

    SB
    Power corrupts, absolute power means we can run a hell of alot of power tools

  4. #4
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    Melbourne
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    Quote Originally Posted by Wrongwayfirst View Post
    I'll give you an example. I used to sand to 80 then 120. Definitely made SWMBO happy. Then I started sanding to 400 and now I sand to 1200. Many many oohs and ahhs later I pretty much sand to 1200 I am looking to get some even finer sandpaper to see if I can increase brownie points.
    oh and no skipping steps I run through the lot. In the finer paper it sometimes is as quick as thirty seconds work and move up.
    if the finish is important the sanding is too. If not then not.
    Extra Info
    What finish do you use. Oil or Shellac or Poly or somethin else?

  5. #5
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    Default Horses for causes?

    Thanks everyone.
    Seems to me that the comment made by LGS is very pertinent, even though he pretended it was a question . I can understand sanding to microgrit levels if the timber is going to be oiled... The oil does not sit on the surface - it penetrates - so you will always be feeling the surface of the timber when you touch it. But I would have thought that going much beyond 240 is a waste of time when the piece is destined for stain and polyurethane... The polyurethane forms film on the surface... Uhm, I seem to be answering my own question

  6. #6
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    Even with PolyU how fine you go depends a lot on the timber itself.

    I work down through the grits until I can not see a difference when I rub the next finest grit along the direction of the grain. I'll finish with that last grit, using a sanding block, along the grain just to be sure.
    I may be weird, but I'm saving up to become eccentric.

    - Andy Mc

  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by LGS View Post
    What finish do you use. Oil or Shellac or Poly or somethin else?
    Brushed shellac is my latest finish of choice, prior to that I used tung oil. I have now realised why my painted furniture doesn't have that gloss I want. I only sanded roughly with 80 and 120

  8. #8
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    I've got 2000 grit random orbit sander paper. If I ever run out (which I seriously doubt I ever will) I could replace it with a piece of wet lettuce, which is just as abrasive. Once you get past 600 it is hard to tell the difference. For a box or a table top, I would almost always sand to at least 800. I always use shellac or oil though, not poly.

    Trav
    Some days we are the flies; some days we are the windscreen

  9. #9
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    Aug 2007
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    Quote Originally Posted by Wrongwayfirst View Post
    Brushed shellac is my latest finish of choice, prior to that I used tung oil. I have now realised why my painted furniture doesn't have that gloss I want. I only sanded roughly with 80 and 120
    These are some photos of Tung Oil hard burnished up to 4000 grit. This method of using Tung Oil gives strong resistance to heat and liquid and maintains it's shine even after wipe down with Spray and Wipe. (which I use regularly to clean the pieces.)

    Regards,

    Rob
    Attached Images Attached Images

  10. #10
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    Feb 2011
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    Default Staining

    The fine sanding prior to staining is dependent on thefinish one uses.

    For example. If one was to use the Livos oils in a stain and would sand to e.g. 1000 grit, the pores would be glazed over and will not allow any of the pigments to penetrate....giving little if any effect of a stain. If however one would sand to anywhere from 120 # to 240#...again, depending on the timber and the project, the pigments would be trapped in the pores, giving more depth to the stain.
    You may feel this is “rough”, well with a natural coating one can manipulate the surface to win some of those brownie points. When the surface is dry, one can go over the surface with something like a scotch brite, fine steel wool, old worn sandpaper, anything to flatten the wax crystals in the oil.
    This then give more shine as the light reflects off the surface, it is not to cut back any fibres that may stick up which often happenswith water based coatings.....builds on the “fine furniture feel”.

    Either way with stains, always do a test sample prior as the result may not be what you anticipate.
    Livos Australia

    <O</O

  11. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by LGS View Post
    These are some photos of Tung Oil hard burnished up to 4000 grit. This method of using Tung Oil gives strong resistance to heat and liquid and maintains it's shine even after wipe down with Spray and Wipe. (which I use regularly to clean the pieces.)

    Regards,

    Rob
    Those pieces look amazing. Howver they would have looked just as good if they were sanded to a coarser grit, I think...

  12. #12
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    Quote Originally Posted by GarciaJ View Post
    Those pieces look amazing. Howver they would have looked just as good if they were sanded to a coarser grit, I think...
    I doubt it.
    Tom

    "It's good enough" is low aim

  13. #13
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    Melbourne
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    Quote Originally Posted by GarciaJ View Post
    Those pieces look amazing. Howver they would have looked just as good if they were sanded to a coarser grit, I think...
    Well, it took me 2 years to get that kind of finish reproducibly and I can assure you that anything under 2000g just doesn't give the finish and durability. Like Chesand, I think "good enough is low aim"

    Regards,

    Rob

  14. #14
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    Just to throw another cog into the works, I find that the grits I use between & after coats - esp. the first - are where the finer grits really make the difference. They make a diff before applying the first coat, but I think it's negligible and feel it's often wasted work and effort.

    Mind you, I'll often almost remove the first coat completely, making it more a pore/grain filler than an actual coat and use progressively finer grits from then on. That way these finer grits have a progressively smoother & flatter surface to actually have an effect on. Otherwise it's a bit like trying to sand out the holes in Swiss Cheese!

    It works for me, anyway.

    Quote Originally Posted by LGS View Post
    Well, it took me 2 years to get that kind of finish reproducibly and I can assure you that anything under 2000g just doesn't give the finish and durability. Like Chesand, I think "good enough is low aim"
    2 years, a lot of hard work and more than one or two disappointments to get there, I'm thinking. They look good.
    I may be weird, but I'm saving up to become eccentric.

    - Andy Mc

  15. #15
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    Default Now I'm Confused

    So I started out with P240, and then changed to P360. The P360 defintely feels rougher on pine... so I figure that one of the previous commenters is correct. How fine to go must depend on the timber, even when using oils.

    Also I looked this up on Wikipedia, and some of the grit sizes being quoted here are just off the charts. The finest I could get at the local hardware was P240 on normal sandpaper. The finer grades can only be found on emery paper, and described as being for metal finishing. Yet some of you are describing 4000 grit and even higher... surely we are talking about different roughness scales.

    The wikipedia chart stops at P2500... which is american grit 1000. The average particle size is only a few microns. At these grit numbers. Yet some of the responses here talk about serval thousand grit.

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