cnancekievill
New Member
Hi folks,
This question may have been covered before - I have searched the forums but not come up with anything but do just point me to the right thread if there is one.
We have lots of exterior woodwork on our boat, mostly mahogany or sapele. Keeping on top of the varnish is tough and I'm thinking that a better power sander will make the job quicker. This will mostly be for keying and prep as I tend to strip larger areas of varnish with a scrapper and hot air gun. We've got an orbital sander, but this is far too big and heavy. And an old Bosch delta but it is really at the end of its life. Looking at what is available, the choice seems to be between a delta sander, a palm sander and a dual action sander. It isn't clear what the difference is between a delta and a palm (apart from the obvious shape of the base), and how is a DA different from an orbital? Also they all seem to move in tiny circles, rather than back and forth like hand sanding.
What is the best device for sanding long but awkward shapes, tight areas, etc (cockpit coaming is made up of about 5 differently shaped bits of mahogany)?
While we're on the topic of varnish - I've got some black patches of wood where the water has got in under the varnish. I've stripped the varnish off and dried the wood out but the black remains - any idea how to get this off? Varnish also seems to fail badly where it joins to somewhere else (such as the stainless portlights). Do you think this is because the varnish isn't flexible enough to move with the different expansion/contraction rates of the metal and wood, or some other reason? I'm using International Compass, have used Epifanes in the past but the drying time is just too long!
Thanks
This question may have been covered before - I have searched the forums but not come up with anything but do just point me to the right thread if there is one.
We have lots of exterior woodwork on our boat, mostly mahogany or sapele. Keeping on top of the varnish is tough and I'm thinking that a better power sander will make the job quicker. This will mostly be for keying and prep as I tend to strip larger areas of varnish with a scrapper and hot air gun. We've got an orbital sander, but this is far too big and heavy. And an old Bosch delta but it is really at the end of its life. Looking at what is available, the choice seems to be between a delta sander, a palm sander and a dual action sander. It isn't clear what the difference is between a delta and a palm (apart from the obvious shape of the base), and how is a DA different from an orbital? Also they all seem to move in tiny circles, rather than back and forth like hand sanding.
What is the best device for sanding long but awkward shapes, tight areas, etc (cockpit coaming is made up of about 5 differently shaped bits of mahogany)?
While we're on the topic of varnish - I've got some black patches of wood where the water has got in under the varnish. I've stripped the varnish off and dried the wood out but the black remains - any idea how to get this off? Varnish also seems to fail badly where it joins to somewhere else (such as the stainless portlights). Do you think this is because the varnish isn't flexible enough to move with the different expansion/contraction rates of the metal and wood, or some other reason? I'm using International Compass, have used Epifanes in the past but the drying time is just too long!
Thanks