AROUND THE HOUSE NEWSLETTER

Remodeling Remedies

VOLUME 1 ISSUE 3  

CONTENTS

Refinishing Your Hard Wood Floors
 
Make Your Home More Energy Efficient
 
Will Your Roof Cost You Thousands This Year?
 
The Benefits of Weather Stripping
 
Around The House Tip Of The Month

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Refinishing Your Hardwood Floors

For most homeowners, refinishing a scratched and scuffed wood floor can be a messy and time consuming job. With average woodworking skills, the right equipment and a little patience, you can obtain professional results for a fraction of the cost professionals would charge.

Determine if the floor needs to be refinished by first observing any peeling, cracking or bleaching. If deep scratches, burns or stains have penetrated the finish, you probably need to sand and refinish the floor.

Make arrangements for the proper equipment at your local equipment rental store. Even with the best equipment, damage can occur if you are not very careful.

The first step in restoring a hardwood floor is to remove all the furnishings from the room. The fine dust created from sanding the floor will cover everything. Remove draperies and seal off cabinet doors and cupboards with masking tape, newspaper or plastic sheeting. Close the door to the room before beginning sanding and open all windows.

Next, perform all needed repairs to the floor. Now that all the furnishings have been removed, you can see any badly split or warped boards that have to be replaced.

Also, pull or remove any protruding nails, pull out old carpet staples, nail down loose or squeaky boards and finally, fill all nail holes or remaining cracks with wood filler and let dry for the recommended length of time.

Remove as much base molding from around the floor as possible. This will give you better access to the edges and will keep the moldings from being damaged by the sanding equipment.

Rent two different sanders: a drum sander and a disc sander, sometimes called an edger. You'll also need a hand-held scraper, a portable electric finishing sander and three grades of sandpaper: coarse, medium and fine.

Start with the drum sander loaded with coarse sandpaper. Before starting the machine, tip it back so the drum is not in contact with the floor. After it starts, move forward while lowering the drum gradually until it touches the floor. Keep moving while the machine is sanding even a short pause can leave a gouge in the floor.

Start sanding at one end of the room and work toward the other. You don't have to push the machine forward, because when the drum hits the floor it will move forward on its own. Keeping a firm grip on the handle, sand the floor slowly and ease-up at the end of each run. Overlap runs a few inches to make certain you didn't miss any floor area along the way. Go over the entire floor again with medium grit sand paper and one more time with fine grit sand paper.

For strip flooring, always sand with the grain. With parquet flooring, the first pass should be at a 45 degree angle to the length of the room. The second pass is at a 45 degree angle from the opposite corner of the room in an "X" pattern. The final pass should be along the length of the room.

After you have sanded the entire floor, switch to the disc sander. Load the disc sander with coarse paper and sand those areas that you couldn't reach with the drum sander. However, even the disc sander won't be able to reach into corners. Leave those areas until all the sanding is done and then scrape them smooth and even with the rest of the floor using a hand scraper and sand paper.

After the floor has been sanded with coarse paper using the disc sander, repeat the procedure using medium and then fine paper.

Use a portable electric sander to remove any cross grain sanding marks left from the disc sander. Use the scraper and the sanders to touch up any remaining areas. Finally, vacuum the floor to remove dust and then wipe it down with a tack cloth.

Floor finishes can then be applied after the floor is clear of any remaining dust. If you want a change of color, you can use either water-based or petroleum-based stains. Just pick a color you like, then try it on an inconspicuous part of the floor to see if the finished color meets with your approval.

The floor finishes that cover the stain fall into two broad categories: penetrating finishes and surface coatings. Penetrating finishes, such as tung oil types or penetrating floor sealers, soak into the pores of the wood and bond with the fibers to seal, harden and protect the surface.

Penetrating sealer can be applied with a rag, brush, squeegee or lamb's wool applicator. Once the first coat is applied and dry, a light sanding is need before the application of a second coat.

Polyurethane is the most popular of the surface finishes. It can be applied with a lambs wool applicator or a wide brush in two to three coats with light sanding between each application.

 

Contact our Home Improvement Specialist today to help you with your home improvement needs.

 

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