Scott B. said:
I say this with all due respect for what I am sure is a nice result, but I think you are sanding too much and using more grits than needed to get to an excellent finish. Maybe its just semantics, but it sounds like alot.
When I don't sand between coats of shellac I get bad results---the finish doesn't look good. The instructions on the can for waterbase explicitly instruct me to sand between coats. So as far as I can tell I'm not sanding more than needed since I only sand once, with a single grit, after each coat.
Using the finest grit that does the job is best because I'm removing less of the finish that I labored to apply. So if P600 works then going down to P400 means I'll be removing more finish. Might mean I'd need to add another coat, especially if using a machine is more aggressive than hand sanding. In that case using P400 might be more like hand sanding at P220 or something in terms of amount removed.
[quote author=MahalaHomecraft]
If you're using festool paper you'll be using their grits, so if you're asking about using p400 then the regular 400 should be way finer than that. So either way that shouldn't create an issue, right?
[/quote]
Festool is European and so all their grits use the European system, so all their normal papers are "P" graded. They don't have "regular" American 400 grit. Now I did notice some things that were graded as S or A and I don't know what that means. I think the Vlies was S800 or A80 or something like that.
[quote author=leakyroof]
Hmm, I tend to sand between coats with 400 or 600 grit Abranet from Mirka, but this is by hand with the vacuum assisted hand sanding blocks that I mentioned. This is for varnish or water based finishes that I work with.
I would rather use my DTS400 with 400 grit Granat or my Ro90 or ETS150 with Platin if I was trying to use grits comparable to the Abranet AND a power sander instead of by hand. For tight corners, I would probably still touch up by hand and not bother with a Delta type sander if time wasn't a problem or I wasn't working on multiple pieces or a large surface.
Not sure if this helps you. [/quote]
When I tried abranet P400 and P600 on finishes they clogged rapidly. That was something of a disappointment, as I love the abranet and I've been hand sanding with a vac assisted block too.
So last night I sanding, using my friend's Bosch RO sander, the area where two boards meet at right angles. It was a pain because of how the sander jiggled around. But it was probably 20 times faster than doing it by hand because it's very hard to hand sand right up to another board. Hand sanding into tight corners is
very difficult because you can't move the sand paper due to the boards at the edges, so it's very labor intensive. I also find it more tiring. I think as a result my sanding is of lower quality near edges and corners. I tend to give up sooner. I was imagining that going to power sanding might actually improve my results.
I thought that for finishing and finer work a shorter stroke was desired, which was why I imagined the 150/3 would serve my needs better than the 150/5. Is that not the case? If it means the sander is occasionally slower when I break out the 60 grit surely that's the tradeoff I choose to get better performance for
finish sanding.