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Getting 2nd coat of (Sadolin) woodstain to stick - any tips?
After putting it off for several years I finally got the urge to re-stain
the garage doors. So I spent a whole day last weekend sanding and then washing down the rather old wood and previous finish. Then I applied the first coat of Sadolin "Quick Drying Woodstain" (one of the water-based ones). Unfortunately I didn't stir it enough so the first part of the tin was very runny and the second much thicker, so one door is much better than the other after one coat. Today (i.e. 1 week later) I tried to apply a second coat (a new tin, and stirred thoroughly this time - lesson learnt). However it seems that the excellent water-repellent properties of the first coat make the second coat all "shrink away" like trying to paint over a waxy surface. Not sure how I'm ever going to get this second coat to stick properly! Anyway it started raining and I had only done a bit so I scrubbed it all off and went indoors to sulk. Any tips on how to get it to stick? I've never seen another paint product where you can't even put another coat on! Thanks, Simon. |
Getting 2nd coat of (Sadolin) woodstain to stick - any tips?
On Sat, 29 Jul 2006 16:11:11 +0100, "Simon Stroud"
wrote: Any tips on how to get it to stick? I've never seen another paint product where you can't even put another coat on! If you think you should be able to apply two coats, ie it implies that you can on the tin, get in touch with your local branch of Crown Decorator Centres, owned by the same company as Sadolin, and get someone to have a look at it (or ring the cusomer support number on the tin). If they are satisfied that its been correctly applied you might get some free paint. |
Getting 2nd coat of (Sadolin) woodstain to stick - any tips?
Simon Stroud wrote:
After putting it off for several years I finally got the urge to re-stain the garage doors. So I spent a whole day last weekend sanding and then washing down the rather old wood and previous finish. Then I applied the first coat of Sadolin "Quick Drying Woodstain" (one of the water-based ones). Unfortunately I didn't stir it enough so the first part of the tin was very runny and the second much thicker, so one door is much better than the other after one coat. Today (i.e. 1 week later) I tried to apply a second coat (a new tin, and stirred thoroughly this time - lesson learnt). However it seems that the excellent water-repellent properties of the first coat make the second coat all "shrink away" like trying to paint over a waxy surface. Not sure how I'm ever going to get this second coat to stick properly! Anyway it started raining and I had only done a bit so I scrubbed it all off and went indoors to sulk. Any tips on how to get it to stick? I've never seen another paint product where you can't even put another coat on! Thanks, Simon. Try rubbing down a small area with wire wool and white spirit. The wax (or whatever the repellent is) should be soluble in that and, if so, the wire wool will absorb it. The acrylic resin itself won't be soluble but often the repellent is a separate ingredient that precipitates on to the surface during drying,. If that's even halfway successful, try rubbing the Sadolin on sparingly with a rag till it "takes". Stripping would be a last resort for me, and only if the doors were in good condition. Otherwise I might paint them. A solvent based undercoat might well dissolve the repellent without preparation. |
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