Teak Furniture

Beautiful, strong, long lasting, heavy outdoor furniture made of teak, ipa, iron wood, rose wood and many other hard, oily, tropical woods.

A small role and sheet of 80 belt sanding material

A small role and sheet of 80 belt sanding material

Sanding teak or any oily hard wood is not likely to become “fun” but it can be considered to be a labor of love when the proper conditions exist. What are those conditions? Well, having a friend or partner is pretty high on the list, a good supply of cold drinks helps too, but having the right materials and equipment make the most difference.

In 2003 I decided that a teak refinishing business was a smart thing to do to make money, so I rented a 1200 sqft shop and put up a website and contacted all the lawn care people to get names of people who had nasty looking teak furniture. Though the business failed to meet expectations I learned plenty about finishing teak wood.

I got a contract with a local assisted living facility that had lots of teak yard furniture. After sanding a couple hundred teak benches that were really raunchy I found that the sand paper I usee was everything to reducing the pain to a minimum.

I used all sorts of sand “paper” and found all of them, including the so called waterproof ones to be totally useless. They loaded up and came apart in just a few minutes wet or dry!

Soooo, one Saturday when I was browsing through the local flee market and found some industrial grade belt sanding material ends (small rolls too short to use in the intended machine) in grits from 36 to 200. I bought the smallest rolls of each grit and went home smiling.

Very close up view or 80 grit industrial belt sanding material.

Very close up view or 80 grit industrial belt sanding material.

The next day I went down to the shop with my treasures and started testing each grit on the teak bench that was next in line to be finished. To my surprise, if the word “BONDED” showed up on the back the material, it was waterproof. If it didn’t it generally wasn’t waterproof. This is important because dry sanding teak with any kind of sanding material is useless. The wood and the sanding material load up in less than 1 minute and generally ruin the paper because you can’t get the wood dust and teak resin  off the sand “paper”.

The next thing I discovered was that anything over 100 grit was just about useless for my purpose. Also, anything under 50 grit was just too course and caAused lots of little “C” scratches no matter how light I pressed on the sander.

Speaking of sander, a jitterbug air sander did the best job of the the sanders I tried. An electric “Palm Sander” worked pretty well too, but it will not stall like the air sander if you put too much pressure on it. And belt sanders are way too aggressive.  A 2 second laps of attention is enough time for a belt sander to do considerable damage.

View of the fabric backing of industrial belt sanding material

View of the fabric backing of industrial belt sanding material

If you don’t have an jitterbug air sander and a 120 psi 6 cfm air supply you’re stuck with an electric sander. Even so, the possibility of getting an electric shock while wet sand with a double insulated palm sander is very low, provided you don’t dip the sander in a bucket of water while you’re standing in a puddle of water.

If you simply put enough pressure on the sander to position it, the sander and the belt sanding material will do all the work for you and not damage the wood.

Unfortunately power sanders don’t work for tight places like in between boards. There  you need to be using one of the medium grit sanding sponges made by both 3M and Norton.  For really tight spots there is a wedge shaped sponge that fits perfectly and does really well. The sanding sponges are water proof and need to be wet while sanding to prevent loading.  The motion of these sanding block should be along the grain as much as possible. Cross grain sanding will leave scratches that are difficult to remove.

What I found to be acceptable for preparing any teak (both furniture and marine applications) with moderate to heavy checking was 60 to 80 grit bonded belt sanding material on a 4 by 7 inch Jitterbug air sander.  You use no real pressure on the sander, but you need to keep the wood wet (not flooded) to keep the sanding dust and teak resin (wax) from loading up the wood and sanding material. Even wood that had the remains of varnish or urethane finishes was no problem, though using some MEK based stripper did make the process much faster.

Wet sanding does cause the grain to rise if the wood is left wet for an extended period of time. If the wood is rinsed and dried promptly very little grain rise occurs.

Sanding teak will smooth the finish and restore the beautiful color of the wood, but it does not prepare the wood for finishing. Anytime you remove wood from teak, you expose new teak resin which prevents finishes from bonding or adhering to the wood. Using sodium hydroxide (part A of most 2 part cleaners), sodium hypochlorite (bleach), hydrogen peroxide, and most acids attack the micro fibers that hold the big fibers of the wood together.  Fortunatly, teak does not breath so these products can’t soak in more that a few thousandths of an inch sparing the bulk of the wood from their damage. However, they do weaken the surface where whatever finish you apply attaches to the wood. When the surface wood seperates from the rest of the board, the finish fall off too.

Just a note of sanding teak decks, steps and swim platforms. Checking is a good thing and should not be removed completely because it provides an escape for water and pond slime that is on your wet feet. This escape mechanism is critical to avoiding slips and falls due to hydroplaning on the wood.

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I am sure you know by now that teak is a very unique wood. The naturally occurring oils that saturate teak wood are both a blessing and curse.

The blessing is: Teak’s very heavy oils greatly retard the tendency of the wood to rot or become vulnerable to bugs and worms. They also give teak the beautiful color and texture we all love. Leaving unprotected teak in the sun brings these natural oils to the surface, where they dry (oxidize) to a what some consider a lovely gray.

The curse is: Because teakwood is saturated with a very heavy oil, it can not breathe like most non-oily woods do. As a result, even tiny amounts of water, trapped between a sealing finish and the wood will vaporize when exposed to the Sun and cause a great deal of pressure to accumulate between the wood and the sealer.

Eventually and generally within a few weeks of hot sunny weather, the UV light makes the sealer brittle and small shiny blisters and/or tiny cracks begin to appear. These cracks allow the water vapor to except during the day, but, at night when the dew forms on the sealer and the temperature falls, water (dew) is drawn into these cracks as the air and remaining water vapor between the sealer and wood begin to cool and contract. As this cycle continues the cracks get larger, the areas of sealer not adhered to the wood grow and begin to peel off. The exposed teak, now open to the air and sun, will allow the teak oil to oxidize and turn gray. Additionally, the unprotected teak is open to mold growth and the associated discoloration.

TeakGuard Finish stands alone in that it allows moisture (water vapor) to escape by “breathing”, while at the same time sealing in the woods natural oils and protecting them from oxidization and discoloration caused by UV light.

TeakGuard’s combination of UV absorbers and reflectors, provide a high degree of protection from ultraviolet rays, to further extend the life of both the TeakGuard finish and the wood.

TeakGuard’s polymer resin do not support mold or mildew growth, but if mold is left on the wood during the cleaning and preparation process, it will continue to grow on the wood under the TeakGuard.

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