Kelpie
Well-Known Member
I'm a complete newbie when it comes to varnishing, and am attempting to get my composite (i.e. marine ply decked) Wayfarer back in the water. By the end of the this week!
I've stripped and sanded as much I can be bothered to, and did a few coats of varnish on the hatch cover as an experiment, which has led me here, cos it didn't go quite as well as I'd hoped.
I'm using Blakes Duragloss, and on the hatch I thinned it 20% with no.1 thinners before applying. Incidentally the thinners was International, not Blakes, cos that's all that they had in the shop.
After leaving it for about eight hours I put on another coat, and a third one after a similar length of time. According ot the instrstructions on the back this would be fine and would save me sanding in between coats.
Oh and I also shook and stirred the can, which I've just read is rather a foolish thing to do (oops).
So, the hatch turned out with a fairly rough (over-brushed?) and bubbly surface, which I'm not very happy with. I left it a few days to thoroughly dry and then gave it a firm sanding all over with fine paper, before applying an unthinned coat. It's still working out a bit bubbly though.
I'm sure I've made more than one mistake, but would appreciate any advice on what I can do differently before starting to varnish the deck itself. I'm not looking for ultimate flawless finish, just something that looks good and servicable, and as I said I'm keen to get back the water in just a few days time.
Not much to ask, is it!
I've stripped and sanded as much I can be bothered to, and did a few coats of varnish on the hatch cover as an experiment, which has led me here, cos it didn't go quite as well as I'd hoped.
I'm using Blakes Duragloss, and on the hatch I thinned it 20% with no.1 thinners before applying. Incidentally the thinners was International, not Blakes, cos that's all that they had in the shop.
After leaving it for about eight hours I put on another coat, and a third one after a similar length of time. According ot the instrstructions on the back this would be fine and would save me sanding in between coats.
Oh and I also shook and stirred the can, which I've just read is rather a foolish thing to do (oops).
So, the hatch turned out with a fairly rough (over-brushed?) and bubbly surface, which I'm not very happy with. I left it a few days to thoroughly dry and then gave it a firm sanding all over with fine paper, before applying an unthinned coat. It's still working out a bit bubbly though.
I'm sure I've made more than one mistake, but would appreciate any advice on what I can do differently before starting to varnish the deck itself. I'm not looking for ultimate flawless finish, just something that looks good and servicable, and as I said I'm keen to get back the water in just a few days time.
Not much to ask, is it!