That way you ll get a heads up on and hopefully the knowledge to avoid some of the problems you might encounter and some of the mistakes beginners make.
What grit sandpaper for hardwood.
This is usually the final grit for maple birch or other particularly hard woods and for any floor that you would like to stain.
Sanding a wood floor is a multi step process.
A lower number means coarser and more abrasive.
Start with a coarse grit and move to finer grits as the floor begins to get smoother with each sanding.
Takes out 60 or 80 grit scratch.
None of it is rocket science but it will help you to read through all the sanding pages including first things first working with sanders and edgers and the sanding faq before you begin.
Replace the abrasive belt after sanding about 250 square feet for most effective results.
Start with coarse sandpaper of 36 to 40 grit progress to a medium 60 grit paper and finish with a finer 100 grit.
This is usually the final grit for most standard hardwood floors.
Remember the smaller the grit number the rougher the sandpaper and the more material it will remove.
Lower grit numbers represent coarser abrasives that scrape off materials much quicker.
Takes out the scratch from 60 grit sandpaper.
Do not skip the progression from coarse grades to finer grades.
Can take out.
A higher number means a finer softer sandpaper grit.
The grit of sandpapers is a rating of the size of abrasive materials on the sandpaper.
Sandpaper grit designations might be the opposite from what you think.