Repairing Worn Finish on Interior Wooden Steps

Started by dawntreader, November 17 2013, 09:05

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dawntreader

We need to repair the worn varnished edges on our B37 steps. The problem is the wood finish appears to have been coloured in a light oak undercoat (?) over darker wood before being varnished and a tinted varnish does not provide adequate depth of colour cover to hide the marks. Does anyone know what this 'undercoat' is and where it can be sourced?

Anthony

I have recoated interior timber in the companionway ( which had suffered a bit of sun damage) by simply a light sanding to key the surface (400 grit or higher) then clean off any oil or wax residue with methylated spirits ( obvious cautionary note here... no naked flames nearby) and then applied two coats of ALKATHANE, a hard wearing floor lacquer marketed by Feast and Watson, a polyurethane brand run in Australia by Dulux paints. It is a high shine 'wet look' product for timber floors and has worked well for me. I just applied with a soft brush and the product is very forgiving as the brush strokes flatten out nicely. Obviously on vertical surfaces it is better to do 2 light coats than one heavy one to avoid sagging.
Best of luck!

Odysseus

I have also refurbished my steps and companionway because of sun, UV fading.

Used about 400 grit paper to key surfaces,  then a wood stain of the appropriate colour,  to bring it back to original,  then a satin finish floor varnish, put on with foam blocks cut from a sheet used as a paint  brush, no lines, perfectly finished.

Shown this method by boat builder on the Hamble river.

Hope this helps.

Odysseus.
Odysseus

dawntreader

Thanks for both above replies.

The key issue here is the darker, under-wood is partially exposed and needs to be re-coated. I will look at the wood stain option to hide this and then varnish as suggested.

Will post update once done  ;D