wptski
Member
- Joined
- Mar 7, 2016
- Messages
- 443
First off, a wood worker I’m not!
I have six birch veneer interior doors that are pushing sixty years old, I’m removing the finish by sanding because I’m doing it in an empty room(hardwood floor is covered with plastic to the ceiling) so I don’t want to mesh with chemicals.
They are standard 30”x 80” so that’s 16.6 sq/ft or 1.5 sq/m which is a large area. I started off with a DeWalt 5” orbital but ended up with a Festool RO 125. I did have big box store discs from 60-120 grit so punched new hole, not a problem since I’m a retired mechanic from the auto industry and have a shim die/punch set. I ordered Rubin 2 150-220 with the RO 125 but bought some 40 grit Granat locally.
I noticed how much better the Rubin 2 was at the start of the pass and the previous pass at 120 grit appeared darker. Here’s the issue that difference gradually faded the further I got along. Since I can’t reach across the entire width and keep the RO 125 flat so when the end of the pass reaches the starting point, it’s dark meets light. The disc is still cutting are my pencil marks are removed but it’s more of a polishing action than cutting, I think.
How would/does this affect my final finish of water based poly which I plan to spray using a HVLP turbine system? Do I just have to use 2, 3, 4, etc. discs per side?
All Festool sanding videos only show demos on small wood areas and nothing like this.
I have six birch veneer interior doors that are pushing sixty years old, I’m removing the finish by sanding because I’m doing it in an empty room(hardwood floor is covered with plastic to the ceiling) so I don’t want to mesh with chemicals.
They are standard 30”x 80” so that’s 16.6 sq/ft or 1.5 sq/m which is a large area. I started off with a DeWalt 5” orbital but ended up with a Festool RO 125. I did have big box store discs from 60-120 grit so punched new hole, not a problem since I’m a retired mechanic from the auto industry and have a shim die/punch set. I ordered Rubin 2 150-220 with the RO 125 but bought some 40 grit Granat locally.
I noticed how much better the Rubin 2 was at the start of the pass and the previous pass at 120 grit appeared darker. Here’s the issue that difference gradually faded the further I got along. Since I can’t reach across the entire width and keep the RO 125 flat so when the end of the pass reaches the starting point, it’s dark meets light. The disc is still cutting are my pencil marks are removed but it’s more of a polishing action than cutting, I think.
How would/does this affect my final finish of water based poly which I plan to spray using a HVLP turbine system? Do I just have to use 2, 3, 4, etc. discs per side?
All Festool sanding videos only show demos on small wood areas and nothing like this.