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Deck staining question

30-30remchester

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 20, 2011
Messages
250
Good morning. I have a question I hope others have experience with. I live in a house that has wooden decks and sidewalks. Over the years and different owners, decks have been replaced and stained. The problem I am having is, each deck has a different color stain. It has been 5 years since we stained any of the decks or walkways to let the sun bleach the boards as much as possible. I would like to redo all the same shade. A medium brown color is most desired. Is there something I can do before I re-stain? Any type or brand of stain better at this type of job better? Any advice is appreciated.
 
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gba2331

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Joined
Sep 22, 2021
Messages
760
I’ve had very slow success with sanding. You can’t use a big machine because decks are uneven and usually have nails at the surface, and a hand-held takes forever.
 

Treeman

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 4, 2008
Messages
545
Location
Michigan
I found this forum below to have the very best deck stain information. Maybe check out the forums and the deck restore products.


Here's one article on that site:
 
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Youngandfree

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Joined
Dec 29, 2020
Messages
877
Location
VA
I'd strip it all first. This company has great support and forum.

 

benwah

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Joined
May 21, 2014
Messages
980
Location
Crested Butte, Colorado
Use a 17 inch swing buffer with a red buffer pad and 80 grit paper for your initial sand. Once you have done both ways, switch to 150 grit and sand it all again. That will give you a nice new surface to stain.
 

dcg9381

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Joined
Jun 20, 2018
Messages
11,627
Location
Austin, TX
They've got deck "re-do" stuff that seems to be a UV stable composite. I've seen people have good luck with in here in Texas, where decks take a beating. It's not transparent, so you'd be redoing everything in the same color.

Personally, I'm DONE with wood decks. It's composite decking for me from here on out, but you guys farther north, decks last a lot longer than they do here.
 

frankd

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Joined
Aug 5, 2014
Messages
677
Location
Long Island, NY
Tough to say without more detail. What condition are the decks in? Are they all the same type of wood? Was a solid stain used or semi-transparent? Solid stains tend to stay on the surface of the wood and can peel over time. I always go with semi transparent because of the peeling issue.
If you had a solid stain on the deck currently, you'll probably need to sand/scrape it off. But if you currently have a semi transparent stain then I'd just soak with 50/50 bleach and water or specific wood bleach, then powerwash off, and apply a semi-transparent stain that is darker than the current stain.
Also keep in mind that if the prior stain was oil based, then a water based stain might have trouble adhering.
 

pioneer1

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Joined
Mar 15, 2015
Messages
417
Location
Kansas City, MO

Strip and Brightener first
 
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