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Deck cleaners and sealers - Printable Version +- MacResource (https://forums.macresource.com) +-- Forum: My Category (https://forums.macresource.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=1) +--- Forum: Tips and Deals (https://forums.macresource.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=3) +--- Thread: Deck cleaners and sealers (/showthread.php?tid=215609) |
Re: Deck cleaners and sealers - Kraniac - 04-15-2018 Pam wrote: I have two decks. Both are large, pressure treated lumber. Nothing fancy. The upper deck receives a lot of sun. A third of the lower deck sees a lot of sun. No doubt sanding would be best. That's not too bad on the large horizontal surfaces. The vertical part of the railings would be a pita. Pam..how large..rough square footage of both? Treat your verticals and your horizontals as two different things.. The horizontals (deck, duh, i know) are the most important..so sand those.. Come up with a scheme for the verticals n railings..if it's pressure cleansing or whatever..maybe get those prepped and finished, first.. then do your deck..you could probably flip that around but you'd want to protect the finished deck from the cleaning agent if it was me i'd the railings first. Is there a ton of cupping in the deck boards..you know..where the board becomes concave? If, over the last 8 years, you've developed serious cupping, then you might want to go the route of cleaning and finishing..bad cupping can be a difficult to sand..reaching the low spots..I've done it many times with typical cupping though.. and usually a couple of passes gets most of it off and then detail with a large random orbital.. Re: Deck cleaners and sealers - OWC Jamie - 04-15-2018 If it's a pre-2003 CCA treated deck you might not want to sand. Just get a cleaner and scrub the mold and mildew off. For a post-2003 deck likely ACQ or CA treated you could still use a cleaner to get the mold and mildew off, but if you've got opaque stain to remove and especially if you're changing or deleting colored stain, you might want to sand it. I used to get a year or two more out of Cabot than the cheap stuff except for on horizontal surfaces that baked in the sun . I,ve also just rolled another coating on in the Fall or Spring where needed without even cleaning when I used to use Thompson's. Now all I have is a 6x6 'deck' ( more of a stair landing really ) and four steps that have been "painted" with a semi-opaque stain to match the paint of the house. I just clean where the paint hasn't maintained adherence scrape off anything loose and repaint it. Last done over 5 yeas ago. Re: Deck cleaners and sealers - space-time - 04-15-2018 PeterW wrote: is it just the dust or there are nasty chemicals in this pressure treated wood? Thanks Re: Deck cleaners and sealers - Pam - 04-15-2018 billb wrote: We're talking post 2003. What I have now replaced the CCA treated lumber. Re: Deck cleaners and sealers - PeterW - 04-15-2018 Without “nasty chemicals”, termites turn southern yellow pine into sawdust within a year or two. The current chemicals are not as bad as CCA was (used prior to 2004) but they still are not something you want to breathe. And those particle masks they sell in the big box stores do very little to stop small dangerous particles. With dust, it’s not the particles you can see that you need to worry about. Re: Deck cleaners and sealers - Pam - 04-15-2018 Kraniac wrote: I have two decks. Both are large, pressure treated lumber. Nothing fancy. The upper deck receives a lot of sun. A third of the lower deck sees a lot of sun. No doubt sanding would be best. That's not too bad on the large horizontal surfaces. The vertical part of the railings would be a pita. Pam..how large..rough square footage of both? Treat your verticals and your horizontals as two different things.. The horizontals (deck, duh, i know) are the most important..so sand those.. Come up with a scheme for the verticals n railings..if it's pressure cleansing or whatever..maybe get those prepped and finished, first.. then do your deck..you could probably flip that around but you'd want to protect the finished deck from the cleaning agent if it was me i'd the railings first. Is there a ton of cupping in the deck boards..you know..where the board becomes concave? If, over the last 8 years, you've developed serious cupping, then you might want to go the route of cleaning and finishing..bad cupping can be a difficult to sand..reaching the low spots..I've done it many times with typical cupping though.. and usually a couple of passes gets most of it off and then detail with a large random orbital.. We're talking 200 sqft. Each. No cupping. Re: Deck cleaners and sealers - Kraniac - 04-15-2018 Pam wrote: I have two decks. Both are large, pressure treated lumber. Nothing fancy. The upper deck receives a lot of sun. A third of the lower deck sees a lot of sun. No doubt sanding would be best. That's not too bad on the large horizontal surfaces. The vertical part of the railings would be a pita. Pam..how large..rough square footage of both? Treat your verticals and your horizontals as two different things.. The horizontals (deck, duh, i know) are the most important..so sand those.. Come up with a scheme for the verticals n railings..if it's pressure cleansing or whatever..maybe get those prepped and finished, first.. then do your deck..you could probably flip that around but you'd want to protect the finished deck from the cleaning agent if it was me i'd the railings first. Is there a ton of cupping in the deck boards..you know..where the board becomes concave? If, over the last 8 years, you've developed serious cupping, then you might want to go the route of cleaning and finishing..bad cupping can be a difficult to sand..reaching the low spots..I've done it many times with typical cupping though.. and usually a couple of passes gets most of it off and then detail with a large random orbital.. We're talking 200 sqft. Each. No cupping. Easy Peasy, IMO..I'd sand. Are you doing this project? hub? Flock of cousins? take some pics, could you? I'd be interested in seeing the deck surfaces and the railing set up.. Re: Deck cleaners and sealers - Pam - 04-15-2018 http://s296.photobucket.com/user/psphil/library/Deck Only one board on the upper deck has popped up. That'll be easy to nail back down. Edit: only pressure washed the lower deck so far Re: Deck cleaners and sealers - J Marston - 04-15-2018 A very large majority of deck cleaners use sodium hypochlorite or its variants: in other words, bleach. It's not good for wood (or composite decking). Sand it. Re: Deck cleaners and sealers - Pam - 04-15-2018 J Marston wrote: Definitely not using sodium hypochlorite or a chlorine bleach product. I had considered a homemade potion of 1/2 cup of oxyclean to 2 gallons of water. |