I posted this item on a different thread. I thought that some of you would like to see what I did. Burt
BurtB
Registered Member Posts: 1
Join Date: May 2008
Re: Brighten up the salon - 05-19-2008, 07:24 AM
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My experience with refinishing of wood in 1978 Hatteras Yachtfish.
My wood was dull and dark on the boat, and I tried several things like wiping down, cleaning but it was never looked very good. I was visiting the Lauderdale boat show and went on a 1974 Hatteras Sportfish. I was amazed at the wood. It was brilliant, soft finish, not light in color but the real Formosa teak wood showed through. There was a lady who was sitting on the boat for the broker and she turned out to be the person who did the wood refinish job on the boat for the owner. Her recipe was clean the wood with denatured alcohol using a green 3M pad. Scrub with pad and plenty of alcohol. Wipe the area then with clean rags with alcohol until there is no residue on rag. She told me that this was the most important part was the prep work of cleaning. After allowing the wood to dry she use Jel'd- Poly-Kote for the finish.
Before I started this job I purchased a can of Jel'd- Poly-Kote and did the back of one of the closet doors. It came out beautiful and so the project began.
If you have any discolored areas on any of the teak use a liquid stain that will match the color. Do not use stain/varnish, use just the stain for color. I had a few areas that water had leaked in that had caused the wood to turn white. I could not believe all the gunk that came off of the walls as we cleaned the wood. The previous owner, I was the third owner of the boat had used furniture oil to try to make the wood look good, it never looked good. Any way we scrubbed all of the Formosa teak, and it really started to look clean. The scrubbing was the difficult part.
After the cleaning we started with the product Jel-Kote satin finish that the lady had told us about. You wipe it on and then wipe it off. I used a sponge applicator that had cloth around it for the application and then followed it with cheese clothe to wipe it down. I did two coats, she suggested three, I got tired, there is a lot of wood on the boat. I pulled up all base boards and quarter round and did them separately.
The final work was spectacular, the wood took on a soft sheen that glowed. I did the refinish nine years ago and the wood still looks great today. I use only a damp cloth to wipe down the wood for clean up. The amazing thing is that in areas that receive wear (stair case going into galley} I can just wipe it down with alcohol on a rag, let it dry and reapply a couple of coats of Jel-Kote and it looks great again. The new finish blends perfectly with the old.
This process does not lighten the wood but restores it to its orginal nutmeg color. I keep my boat in Fort Lauderdale if you would like to contact me to see it. I will try to answer any questions you might have.
Product is
Jel'd Poly Kote
Wood-Kote Products
Portland, Orgeon 97211
woodkote.com