The building is a 500 year old cottage with Grade II listing. The original boards have to be conserved in place but they are more dust and holes than wood.
I have laid air dried English oak planks 13 inches wide on a suspended floor to copy the original boards. They are now fixed to the suspended mini joists by hidden fixings to appear to be loose laid as the originals were.
Problem is that they have band saw marks across the grain and these need to be removed by planning or a heck of a lot of hand sanding before being oiled. Some of the boards have warped and the power plane cannot remove the cross grain marks at the edges without taking a lot of wood from the centre of the plank.
Are there any methods to reduce what looks like being a couple of weeks of hand sanding.
Yes I KNOW they should have been planed before being fixed down but I needed the bedroom to be useable without falling through the holes in the original floor.
I have laid air dried English oak planks 13 inches wide on a suspended floor to copy the original boards. They are now fixed to the suspended mini joists by hidden fixings to appear to be loose laid as the originals were.
Problem is that they have band saw marks across the grain and these need to be removed by planning or a heck of a lot of hand sanding before being oiled. Some of the boards have warped and the power plane cannot remove the cross grain marks at the edges without taking a lot of wood from the centre of the plank.
Are there any methods to reduce what looks like being a couple of weeks of hand sanding.
Yes I KNOW they should have been planed before being fixed down but I needed the bedroom to be useable without falling through the holes in the original floor.