Hi All,
Picked this table up last night after buying it at auction.
Overall it's in good condition with a few knocks and dings and a few pen impressions on the top from kids etc. I bought it expecting to refinish it anyway.
Pretty know what i'm going to do which is sand from 80-320 then finish with Fiddes hard wax oil.
The current finish i'm not sure of but guessing some type of sprayed PU\Varnish. It's solid so have plenty of time to sand it off and wood thinkness to play with.
The question i have is around the edges, the end grain is along the long edge and what to do there as i'm sure the finish will have penetrated it and how to deal with it.
I have an idea (feel free to laugh) to put the center section in, marking the orientation. Carefully align it then take 2-3mm off all 4 sides with the plunge saw and then use my router to put a small roundover back on once sanded? There is easily 150mm overhang and the construction tells me that there shouldn't be any metal in there.
Is this a reasonable approach? Or is there a better way?
Thanks for the advice.
Cheers,
Jon.
Picked this table up last night after buying it at auction.
Overall it's in good condition with a few knocks and dings and a few pen impressions on the top from kids etc. I bought it expecting to refinish it anyway.
Pretty know what i'm going to do which is sand from 80-320 then finish with Fiddes hard wax oil.
The current finish i'm not sure of but guessing some type of sprayed PU\Varnish. It's solid so have plenty of time to sand it off and wood thinkness to play with.
The question i have is around the edges, the end grain is along the long edge and what to do there as i'm sure the finish will have penetrated it and how to deal with it.
I have an idea (feel free to laugh) to put the center section in, marking the orientation. Carefully align it then take 2-3mm off all 4 sides with the plunge saw and then use my router to put a small roundover back on once sanded? There is easily 150mm overhang and the construction tells me that there shouldn't be any metal in there.
Is this a reasonable approach? Or is there a better way?
Thanks for the advice.
Cheers,
Jon.