I measured a deck today for a a bid on wash and stain. It all appears to be unsealed PT pine, perhaps even just southern yellow pine The wood under the mat indicates that it may have been "sealed" with thompsons or similar. Customer indicates that the spot beads water but she is the first owner and swears no treatment has been ever been applied. Perhaps factory thompsons. In any case, nothing remains now but dead, dry, grey surface. IMHO, no strip needed just wash off the grey and stain.
The customer seeks to eliminate the roughness and splinters, make the deck pretty, and prevent it from being in this condition again. There is some cracking and checking, but IMHO it is in good condition considering. If it was mine, this would be a simple wash and stain. But, the customer wants the deck safe (i.e. splinter free) for a toddler in bare feet.
I got this one second hand. The customer had previously paid someone to sand the entire deck. They previous freelancer bid $300 and after 2 days, three palm sanders, and a ton of sweat later, they just disappeared. The rails are yellow again (not bad work), the pickets are grey'ish (half-way sanded), and the floor is about 15-20% yellow again in patches.
All that said, how do I approach this one? Is a wall-to-wall sand warranted or overkill? If warranted, how do I best perform that? With a floor sander? Is that do-able for a first timer without serious damage? And how do I bid the sanding work?
Finally, is there anyone with experience near me (Fayetteville, Ga) that wants partner on this deal so I can learn? I'll provide the labor and materials, you provide the expertise and training. Or we can work something out. All I really want is to cover my overhead and leave behind a happy customer who thinks I'm the expert I portrayed myself to be.
I measured a deck today for a a bid on wash and stain. It all appears to be unsealed PT pine, perhaps even just southern yellow pine The wood under the mat indicates that it may have been "sealed" with thompsons or similar. Customer indicates that the spot beads water but she is the first owner and swears no treatment has been ever been applied. Perhaps factory thompsons. In any case, nothing remains now but dead, dry, grey surface. IMHO, no strip needed just wash off the grey and stain.
The customer seeks to eliminate the roughness and splinters, make the deck pretty, and prevent it from being in this condition again. There is some cracking and checking, but IMHO it is in good condition considering. If it was mine, this would be a simple wash and stain. But, the customer wants the deck safe (i.e. splinter free) for a toddler in bare feet.
I got this one second hand. The customer had previously paid someone to sand the entire deck. They previous freelancer bid $300 and after 2 days, three palm sanders, and a ton of sweat later, they just disappeared. The rails are yellow again (not bad work), the pickets are grey'ish (half-way sanded), and the floor is about 15-20% yellow again in patches.
All that said, how do I approach this one? Is a wall-to-wall sand warranted or overkill? If warranted, how do I best perform that? With a floor sander? Is that do-able for a first timer without serious damage? And how do I bid the sanding work?
Finally, is there anyone with experience near me (Fayetteville, Ga) that wants partner on this deal so I can learn? I'll provide the labor and materials, you provide the expertise and training. Or we can work something out. All I really want is to cover my overhead and leave behind a happy customer who thinks I'm the expert I portrayed myself to be.
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