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Thread: Restoring a red cedar spa
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4th May 2019, 11:16 AM #1New Member
- Join Date
- May 2019
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- Sydney
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- 1
Restoring a red cedar spa
Hi guys,
wondering if you may be able to assist. I have an old spa which is clad in what i think is red cedar. i sanded and stained it with a cabots outdoor furniture product last year. looked kind of ok but a year later it's pretty ordinary. see pics attached. just wondering what is the best way to bring this back. Thinking of a diluted hydrochloric acid solution to try and clean the timber (no idea what the black is) then a sikkens semi solid stain.
any thoughts or observations would be appreciated.
cheers
andrew
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4th May 2019, 11:54 AM #2
Try some Oxalic acid first. Its sold at Bunnings now .
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4th May 2019, 12:59 PM #3GOLD MEMBER
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- May 2011
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- Albury
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- 279
The timber is almost certainly Western Red Cedar. It's a timber from the East Coast of the US, not to be confused with Australian Red Cedar.
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4th May 2019, 04:02 PM #4GOLD MEMBER
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- Nov 2012
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- Brisbane
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- 596
Exterior timber
Agree with both of the above. The black is most probably a mixture of oxidisation of the timber and resin as well as quite possibly some blue-green "algae" (not regarded as an alga any more but that is what most people know it as, if at all).
I have also purchased the oxalic acid on eBay as a white crystalline powder. If you aren't confident mixing it you can buy ready-made solutions under various trade names such as Dekswood, from most paint shops, though its much more expensive that way it is certainly more convenient.
If you want a natural-look oiled finish you could look at a marine oil called Deks Olje (available from Whitworths) that you put on wet-on-wet until the timber is saturated. I have found that lasts best out of all the uncoloured decking oils. Any timber out in the weather needs to be re-coated about every six months if oiled, though the pigmented oils can stretch that out to a year. Exterior paints will easily last 10 years, so are the lowest maintenance.
David
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4th May 2019, 04:15 PM #5SENIOR MEMBER
- Join Date
- Apr 2015
- Location
- Brisbane
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- 65
We have spa with similar looking timber. It was my parents so fairly old. Last year I sander to bare timber and coated with marine varnish from Bunnings. Time will tell how long it lasts.
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4th May 2019, 04:22 PM #6China
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- Dec 2005
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- South Australia
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- 140
I have only ever use Aussie clear on my spa after 10 years still looks good
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5th May 2019, 11:44 PM #7GOLD MEMBER
- Join Date
- Nov 2012
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- Brisbane
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- 596
Hi China,
What is Aussie Clear? Is it an oil or a polyurethane - other? How exposed to the weather is the spa? The exposure and UV levels make a huge difference to the longevity of a finish. My boat has a simple marine varnish inside (paint outside) but it is almost always enclosed with clears and canvas, so very little UV. Still needs refinish after 5 years!
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6th May 2019, 01:26 AM #8China
- Join Date
- Dec 2005
- Location
- South Australia
- Posts
- 140
It is a oil I have used it twice in ten years and yes my spa is semi undercover https://preschem.com/products/timber.../aussie-clear/
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