dj43
Well-Known Member
sorry if this has been done before, but reading back through past threads, why do most prefer not to apply oil to there teak decks, notice in this months mag, that they are recommending to apply oil a little and often,
Interestingly, My boat,An Absolute 41 new in 2009, has teak lifting at the edges on the swim platform, the rest is fine. We got her in Nov 2009 & had her hauled out for a complete going over in March 2010 including teak, repeated the exercise this year in Jan but the boatyard left the swim platform due to defects found. Absolute are trying to blame this on lack of maintenance. Could be a new thread starting soon. Where would be the best place to "Do a Gludy" on them ?
Unless I'm misunderstanding this is simple to repair. Use little wooden wedges to prise up the corners/edges that are lifting, squirt in black sikaflex, apply a weight, clean off, and sand. Job done. I know this shouldn't happen and it's poor show on Absolute's part (I suspect the new UK dealer isn't interested in helping you...) and the "lack of maintenance" assertion is a pretty outrageous fob off attempt, but it would be easier to fix it than go legal/gludy-esque, on the grounds life is too short. all imho
Consider a Fairline next time. I know I rattle on about Fairline but the quality of support you get from them in combo with the fantastic Essex Boatyards is pretty fantastic. There is a problem with a bit of oak veneer on one of the wall panels in the port side loo on my boat. Fairline/Essex Boatyards are making a new veneered panel, about 3 foot x 6 foot. They email me to say "it's been scheduled for making", "it's being made", "it's been despatched to France", etc) and when it arrives next week they are putting a guy on a plane to install it
All sorts of stuff about maintenance gets quoted. Keeping them clean but unoiled works for me. Two part cleaner, bosh, bosh, bosh. Rinse it off and robert's yer mother's brother.
Others will be along with more technical comments, no doubt.
One thing to watch is the thickness of teak which will circumscribe what you can do. When I bought my current boat the teak looked like this:
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After a false start with a sealing product I checked that there was plenty of depth of teak to work with, sanded it thoroughly and ended up with this:
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which is really quite easy to keep looking smart.
(a) frequent cleaning with a soft deck brush and a soft brush cleaner; (b) quite frequent use of 2 part cleaner but not the third sealer part (c) plenty of freshwater washdowns - not saltwater (d) light power sand every couple of years.
Various proprietary brands (Wessex/Starbrite) sell two part cleaner/brighteners. Basically you dilute and then put the part 1 cleaner on, rinse it off then dilute and apply the part 2 brightener and then rinse that off.
If the teak is pretty clean I believe you can get away with just the part 2 brightener, but it's really no trouble to do both.
OK - thanks.
Do I need to oil it after applying part 2 cleaner?
If so which brand do you recommend for a light golden finish?
Don't apply anything after the part 2 cleaner and rinsing it off.