M
McRabbet
Many of you may have seen my earlier thread "Unique Countertop Commission" that described a beautiful solid Bubinga countertop I built for a client here in Hendersonville. After the installation was completed, I gave the top a final coat of Rockhard Tabletop Varnish and snapped some final pictures, like this one: You can see the nice glossy finish, but something more ominous shows if you look more closely, especially around where the overhead light is reflected. I came back five days later to check the finish and to caulk around the angle brackets and noticed numerous imperfections in the varnish -- often called "pimples" in the literatures -- I call them "Nits". The client was not pleased with this surface, nor was I -- and his wife said she would prefer a satin finish. Here is a close-up after I discovered what the problem really was and what caused it. The nits were not embedded bubbles as I first suspected; they were small solidified particles of varnish that got into the final coat from the varnish brush -- I had picked up one of my very best brushes for this final coat and it had not been cleaned properly -- a fine film of varnish remained on many bristles and they broke off during that application as the brush flexed and laid down in the application. Ugh! My fault and now I had to figure out how to remove them without damaging the finish and leaving scads of dust all over the clients now furnished new home!
I used 320 grit paper in my RO sander with a vacuum hooked to the exhaust port. The Shop Vac had a Drywall Filter Bag installed so nothing could pass through. It took about 2-1/2 hours of patient sanding (8 disks of 320 grit were used) got the "Nits" sanded down to the final finish layer, followed by re-sanding with 400 grit, 600 grit and then 800 grit paper. Here is the result: A beautiful, blemish-free surface!
Thank goodness they wanted a satin finish! I was prepared to rub out this surface back to a high gloss -- I had 1000, 1200, 1500 grit papers, plus 2F and 4F pumice, rottenstone and furniture wax waiting in the wings! Needless to say, I'll always check my varnish brush whenever I pick it up (I've since re-cleaned that contaminated $20 brush and combed out all of the remaining varnish it contained!)
Rob
I used 320 grit paper in my RO sander with a vacuum hooked to the exhaust port. The Shop Vac had a Drywall Filter Bag installed so nothing could pass through. It took about 2-1/2 hours of patient sanding (8 disks of 320 grit were used) got the "Nits" sanded down to the final finish layer, followed by re-sanding with 400 grit, 600 grit and then 800 grit paper. Here is the result: A beautiful, blemish-free surface!
Thank goodness they wanted a satin finish! I was prepared to rub out this surface back to a high gloss -- I had 1000, 1200, 1500 grit papers, plus 2F and 4F pumice, rottenstone and furniture wax waiting in the wings! Needless to say, I'll always check my varnish brush whenever I pick it up (I've since re-cleaned that contaminated $20 brush and combed out all of the remaining varnish it contained!)
Rob