Hi there,
I have just build an extension to my decking to butt up against a new house extension.
The new decking area is in virgin tanalised softwood decking board, and the 5yr old softwood decking has previously been treated with a coloured decking oil.
I (rather my wife) wants the original deck returned (as much as poss) to the uncoated state, then both decks treated with a clear oil coating.
Getting to this original state is the problem. How do I remove the old oiled coating, which is patchy in large areas, ie. it needs re-oiling.
I have heard of 'Prepdeck' which is used by some people and seems to do the job. Although with ~40 sq metres to treat/strip it will be mighty expensive. Also I have a 25yr old grape vine which roots below the decking and I don't want to kill it with nasty chemicals.
The other option I have considered is sanding - I can hire a belt floor sander for the weekend from my local hire centre for ~£34 + VAT + the cost of the belts. Clearly this will not get into the grooves, but that might still look OK
Which is the best option - or is there another??
I have just build an extension to my decking to butt up against a new house extension.
The new decking area is in virgin tanalised softwood decking board, and the 5yr old softwood decking has previously been treated with a coloured decking oil.
I (rather my wife) wants the original deck returned (as much as poss) to the uncoated state, then both decks treated with a clear oil coating.
Getting to this original state is the problem. How do I remove the old oiled coating, which is patchy in large areas, ie. it needs re-oiling.
I have heard of 'Prepdeck' which is used by some people and seems to do the job. Although with ~40 sq metres to treat/strip it will be mighty expensive. Also I have a 25yr old grape vine which roots below the decking and I don't want to kill it with nasty chemicals.
The other option I have considered is sanding - I can hire a belt floor sander for the weekend from my local hire centre for ~£34 + VAT + the cost of the belts. Clearly this will not get into the grooves, but that might still look OK
Which is the best option - or is there another??