Thanks KZbin for showing me a mad lad that build a floor just to prove a point.
@HowToSandAFloor2 жыл бұрын
😂 you know
@Melicoy2 жыл бұрын
Did I miss the part where he shows the finished floor with no waves...
@stephenc22962 жыл бұрын
Actually, it shows that his service is superior. I would only hire him.
@nunyanunya41472 жыл бұрын
white people with their never ending supply ov money and hubris....
@OVOAp02 жыл бұрын
@@stephenc2296 actually, as a wooden flooring professional from germany, with this machine (laegler hummel) you only sand from right to left due to a slight diagonal angle of the cylinder that holds the sanding paper.. which kinda proves that you really arent in a position to judge the quality of his service
@valaverett9203 Жыл бұрын
It took me 25 years as a Wood Flooring Contractor to figure this out on my own. You explained the science of wood grain and drum sanding perfectly. I wish I had had access to this video 24 years ago, which would have eliminated some callbacks to "fix the ripples!"
@ignacio5283 Жыл бұрын
if you sand diagonally at first to avoid dips and ripples, why are there no dips and ripples on the second or third sanding passes when sanding with the grain?
@zacharyriley4122 Жыл бұрын
@@ignacio5283you are removing much less wood with later passes. So it just doesn’t have time to become an issue. All your earlier passes are with lower grit paper. The higher the grit, the less wood you are removing with each pass.
@LordoftheJamesClan2 жыл бұрын
Hello, sandpaper manufacturer here. I can say that yes you need at least 15 degrees to offset the waves, this is also something that takes place all across sanding in general (not just floors). The screen we make for hand sanding and pole sanding in drywall is actually die cut at 15 degrees to avoid waves.
@HowToSandAFloor2 жыл бұрын
Very interesting! Thanks for your comment
@jamesmurphy78282 жыл бұрын
Some of my previous sandding projects make sense now >.> I couldn't figure out why I wasn't happy with them until I saw the video and this comment.
@JoRoBoYo2 жыл бұрын
so don't follow the grain?
@marshallmort3190 Жыл бұрын
@@JoRoBoYo follow the grain, first sure, but not for the next pass. That's what the lesson is. You must have a different angle of attack so that the sander is held in a way where it cannot drop into the anomalies in the floor. He explains in great detail why this is in the video. Even with a simplified representation by using markers to show how the change in angle keeps the errors from propagating. Just watch the whole video.
@vger2 Жыл бұрын
@@marshallmort3190 There was definitely a bit of doubt left in “how to do it right from the start.” He said that the first pass following the grain was fine. But if it’s going to begin creating that “wave” from different board density, why say it is ok? i.e. is it best then to just ALWAYS cut diagonally on all 3 passes? If so, do we cut diagonally to the left on the first pass then diagonally to the right with finer grit then to the left again with finishing grit? Questions remain and I, for one, watched the entire video. It was dismissive to assume the other person did not. 😏
@ajax94332 жыл бұрын
Howdy from the States! Glad you're still making videos. I had never sanded, stained or finished a floor in my life. Bought a house over the summer and ripped the carpet out to find wooden floors. I followed most of your videos to a T. Took me about a week and wasn't easy. Had other contractors come in for varying work asking me who did my floors after it was all said and done. Got a bunch of compliments etc stating it looked like a professional job. Wanted to thank you man. I'm incredibly grateful for these videos and I'm glad I happened upon them. Along the way I got a ton of different and contradictory advice. I don't know why but I went with yours. It's amazing how hard it is to find the 'right' advice. Anyways thanks a million.
@HowToSandAFloor2 жыл бұрын
Awesome, glad I could help and cheers 🍻
@teddybobeddy73742 жыл бұрын
Kinda funny I’m on the same journey right now. Bought a house, ripped out the carpet and found some hardwood. Unreal. I’m hoping to get the same results as you! Atta boy
@lander3673 Жыл бұрын
@@teddybobeddy7374 same same. just ripped out carpet to find a decent looking wood floor underneath. I have no clue what type of wood it is but i'm thinking its pine.
@RobertaAguilar-xg9lk Жыл бұрын
Buying a house now. Don’t like the existing color and glad I found these videos.
@HjCrawford11 ай бұрын
This is a very helpful video. Thank you! 😊
@Cardinalfloors Жыл бұрын
I started my own floor sanding business 4 years ago after working under my dad. Unfortunately he passed away when I was too young and didn't get a chance to fully learn. I have learned more from your videos and program than anywhere else, and for that I am forever grateful.
@lawrenceraven83 Жыл бұрын
How's the business going? I might have the opportunity to adopt my father in laws business but I'm worried that it either won't make enough and or I'll ruin my back and arms.
@Cardinalfloors Жыл бұрын
@@lawrenceraven83 it's been going great honestly! My biggest problem is finding helpers. Most of the time I'm too busy to even keep up with demand. But it is rough on the body. Got to make some wise investments
@justalittletoointrusive Жыл бұрын
@@lawrenceraven83 hardwood sanding is the easiest money for floor layers. I used to do this professionally and gave it up as most of what I was doing was vinyl and linolium (trust me, MUCH harder on the knees). The biggest safety issue after your knees I would say is dust. Timber, concrete etc... if its not asbestos employers try to tell you its fine. They're lying! Wear a mask at all times.
@renedubois63923 ай бұрын
I had the situation, starting My own company, in the weeks MY dear Dad passed away! I am now 30 years in the craft. In 2014 announced the best in The Netherlands. I am placing upto the most difficult floors. I like My work soo much! oh close to 61 kind rergards, Rene du Bois The Netherlands Currently working for AJM VAN HOUDT
@matthewreynolds23842 жыл бұрын
Great explanation. Sanded my upstairs over the summer and I couldn't explain what I was seeing after I finished it. Everyone said I was being too picky. Now I know how to fix it! Some of the best sanding analysis online. Beyond professional and skirting into scientific understanding of sanding as a trade. PS - the demonstration with the markers was a great way to explain why to diagonal.
@HowToSandAFloor2 жыл бұрын
Cheers Matthew 🍻
@chrissavill87132 жыл бұрын
That's how I was trained to sand a floor so it's good to see someone putting the record straight, and the reasons why. Good job
@HowToSandAFloor2 жыл бұрын
Cheers 🍻
@maximebedard6618 Жыл бұрын
That's the way.... first pass 45 degrees, sometimes even more, second pass 20 degrees and the final one straight
@mattwayand7361 Жыл бұрын
Cross checking a hardwood floor. I’ve worked in auto body and paint for 20 years and I cross everything from grinding metal to flat blocking clear at finish but probably wouldn’t have thought to do this. I’m doing my first hardwood floor this weekend and was dreading it until I saw this video. Now I can’t wait to fix and finish! One of more satisfying videos I’ve watched. Thank you!!
@Hawkeyelaotzu2 жыл бұрын
As far as I am aware you are the only person showing how to sand floors correctly. Also how to fill holes and gaps between boards. Many Thanks.
@agrotta16502 жыл бұрын
Thank you for thanking him!
@olroy61 Жыл бұрын
Excellent explanation and exactly right! I've sanded wood floors for 40 years. I always cross cut my first cut. Newly installed wood floors are especially important to do this due to the amount of overwood across the floor. I've never had problems with ripples
@paulcs2607 Жыл бұрын
Brilliant video. Makes sense. This is also the reason why car gearbox’s have helically cut gears (diagonally cut) to eliminate noise and vibration.
@justalittletoointrusive Жыл бұрын
I used to do this professionally and am about 10yrs out of practice. I am in the process of renovating my own house and have been trying to explain things to my father.... this video has been invaluable for putting into words the things I mostly remember but am very out of practice at. The WHY of things is important. Cheers mate, thanks for the clear and concise explanation.
@CB-ch6jw18 күн бұрын
Thank you, thank you , thank you! As a contractor in Michigan who refinishes flooring, I have noticed this issue for years. I have many questions as to what causes it, but you answered those unequivocally with this video! Glad I found your video. Thank you for that education!
@bobhosler2024 Жыл бұрын
A bit late on the comment here, but I am glad I found your page, I have a house built in the 50’s that has original red oak floors that has been trashed by years of stains from spills on a carpet. I’ll be tackling and refinishing my wood floors. Thank you for sharing all the knowledge.
@volundrfrey8962 жыл бұрын
Happy to learn that my dad taught me correctly, and especially glad that I just followed what he taught me when I sanded my own floors.
@troys.91882 жыл бұрын
I used to do scientific samples preparation for a laboratory for electron microscopes. We always alternated sanding directions until all of the previous directions marks were gone. Worked great for high precision work, makes sense to do it for floors. Thanks!
@WatchingTrainsGoBy-PassingTime2 жыл бұрын
It's great that we can share real experience like this to figure things out. Thanks... I've met lots of people with 30 years experience doing a job, wrong... And they rest their laurels on time instead of quality. The bad habits you learn when you start almost always carry on forever and get worse over time. Experimenting helps us learn when we see different results. It makes it easier to figure out what was actually happening. So kudos to you for this one.
@hensch19742 жыл бұрын
Maybee they have done it wrong for 30 years
@Rusty_Raine2 жыл бұрын
I do the exact things when planning old work tables, so this makes perfect sense to me. I never thought about it on floors. I did a few 45 deg passes on the 2 floors that I refinished and never thought about it. Great video.
@IllumiNationGaming18 ай бұрын
I'm currently ripping up carpet and tiles in my house and found really nice hardwood flooring underneath, just needs a good freshen up, so I've been watching a bit on KZbin about repairing, sanding and refinishing old hardwood tongue and groove flooring. I'm a qualified automotive refinisher (spray painter) and was constantly wondering why people are sanding everything straight?? Then I see your video cross hatching it, exactly the way my brain would think to do it from my experience in getting car panels dead straight, so I'm glad to see that cross hatch sanding will work fine on the floor, and I'm not a complete madman for thinking to do it this way!!
@paulbishal91772 жыл бұрын
For 9 years full time (and 4 years part time) I worked with my brother installing and refinishing hardwood floors. He did all the big machine sanding and I did all the edging, scraping, vibrating, etc. I noticed a few things in your video that did not look quite right at the 5:02 mark and the 11:45 mark. My brother has been installing and refinishing floors since 1985 so I sent the video to him. He said: The small waves (chatters) every 2" or so visible in the reflection in the middle of video at the 5:02 mark is from an out of balance/worn drum or loose belt. Probably the drum. If they are exactly uniform in spacing then it is an out of round rear wheel. The waves 1' apart you see at the 11:45 mark are from you walking too slow with the drum pressure set to max on your initial sanding. Everything else in your video he agreed with. BTW, he has been doing his initial sandings with 36 or 40 grit at a diagonal then 60 & 120 with the grain like you recommend since at least 1989 when I first started with him. He then uses 120 sandpaper on a buffer to remove any minor chatters that may have occurred and to remove lap lines. I've seen the diagonal system you use work on everything from: a 4000+ sq. ft. new 3/5/7" plank white oak job that was bleached & whitewashed in 1993 to a 2000+ sq. ft. 4" Douglas fir refinish job in about 2005 to a 3000 sq. ft. new 5" knotty walnut job that was dyed and stained black in about 2007/2008 just before the recession hit and I stopped doing hardwood floors.
@s12832 жыл бұрын
Almost always rough cut between 30-45 degrees. And then gradually bring it straight with consecutive cuts. Has always worked well here in new England where the floors are almost always trashed to start and you have to cut out more than wood density differences. Nice explanation!
@HowToSandAFloor2 жыл бұрын
Cheers Shawn 🍻
@ironassbrown2 жыл бұрын
I was taught to sand 15-30 degrees to the grain with the drum sander. I find it varies depending on the floor sometimes you gotta hit it at 45 degrees from multiple directions sometimes 5 degrees is fine. There are so many variables I don't even know how to type a comment about it, and this video made me aware of even more variables, very informative and well presented.
@HowToSandAFloor2 жыл бұрын
Thats true, and as you suggest you need to change your approach for almost every floor
@physiquemadness Жыл бұрын
@@HowToSandAFloorone question: 15 to 30 degrees back and forward and clean the "scratches" left with the buffer only?
@LindaSmith-zq3pk Жыл бұрын
@@physiquemadnessI asked myself the same question. The video doesn’t seem to be complete.
@davidward9059 Жыл бұрын
Great Video....having a laugh 😂 because you are so right! Been sanding for 30+ years and was taught from day one to always cross no matter what. Then for reasons I can only put down to laziness floor sanders begun forgetting or more likely didn't want to cross. Most floor sanders I talk to have this problem with the same excuses you mentioned, not knowing how easy it is to fix. Keep up the Great work.
@nascarhyde2 жыл бұрын
I purchased your "How to sand a floor" training videos back in 2019 and really learned a lot! I'm in the process of installing some random width white oak flooring in our upstairs master bedroom and I'm very confident with that part.(I have installed hardwood flooring two previous times. But, I have never sanded and finished a hardwood floor yet! This current video came along just in time as I'm going to be sanding and finishing after the xmas holiday. Thanks again for your training videos and your youtube videos! Paul from Michigan, USA
@HowToSandAFloor2 жыл бұрын
Well thats good timing Paul, because by then I should have another video up in the video course area that discusses sanding new floors 🍻
@kamoke12 жыл бұрын
I'm still repairing holes and pulling nails and staples on some hardwood at my house. It's seen a lot of damage, so I'll be going for a rustic/battered look. I'll try a couple test spots, but I'm thinking about using a black filler on the cracks and repairs. If the floor doesn't turn out, I'll probably cover it with ply and laminate, but fingers crossed. I'm feeling more and more prepared though after watching these videos. Thanks for taking the time to make them, and I wish you continued success.
@HowToSandAFloor2 жыл бұрын
Cheers 🍻
@radonvon312010 ай бұрын
I just tore my carpet out of my first home I bought I knew there were hardwood floors since it was built in 1909 ! Someone painted them with house paint white for some reason I have no idea why but they seem in ok shape and I was looking for videos on sanding them found your video on people teaching the wrong way on KZbin! Bright me to this and I’m grateful for your videos since I don’t pay anyone to do work on anything I learn it myself and do it ! These videos are what I needed to find! Can’t wait to sand them in the spring ❤
@regankaldahl84962 ай бұрын
I can show you why they don't look good after you get done doing them yourself? I hope you never buy a airplane ✈️ and think you can teach yourself how to fly it cause you never hire anyone and just teach yourself?
@JordanHyman-mc4dsАй бұрын
Very helpful. Been in the hardwood/sanding game about 10 years now. Been trying to go solo on it and definitely learning! So thank you
@stevec4042 жыл бұрын
As in most fields of endeavor, the prevailing 'correct' way is seldom challenged...though its results may be less than satisfactory. Good video. I have sanded and refinished my share of floors as a renter/owner. I will remember this video should the need arise again. Thanks. Subscribed.
@MennoNeher10 ай бұрын
Have done a floor or two in my time, but I have to say: good stuff here. Never realized this. Two thumbs up!
@gurunathkale7853 Жыл бұрын
I am going to do DIY project next week and follow your steps. And will share the result. Thanks for sharing the videos, very informative for beginners like me 🙏
@joelk9603 Жыл бұрын
Best explanation ever about the proper technique for using a drum sander to refinish a hardwood floor. You saved me from making a mess of things, thanks very much!!
@regularguy92642 жыл бұрын
Love the explanation. I have watched enough of your videos to know that you have to go diagonal for the first pass! And now I know much better why!
@HowToSandAFloor2 жыл бұрын
I’m glad the regular guy is starting to understand this 😂🙌🏽
@AFrosty_PolarVortex Жыл бұрын
I can’t get over the fact that you built a floor to make this video. That is some serious dedication.
@tylerwarren81392 жыл бұрын
I've been refinishing floors and stairs for 25 years. You're absolutely right.
@VeronicaMist4 ай бұрын
Absolutely fantastic explanations, thank you so much. You actually saved me from ruining 80 yr old Douglas Fir floors. 🙏🏻👍🏻
@binaryguru10 ай бұрын
I've been sanding floors diagonally just like you do in this video. I worked for a company known for the high quality finishes. You are %100 right about how to sand floors!
@jasonharral48033 ай бұрын
Very well made video. This was the first thing I learned from the pro who taught me, but I probably would never have figured it out on my own. Nice work making your point clear and understandable.
@peterkotara2 жыл бұрын
I've been sanding floors professionally for 40+ years (2nd generation sander, learnt from my father during the school hollidays whe I was 12). I only angle a floor if it's cupped. I'd never start an engineered floor (assuming it had waterbourne coating on it) with 40 grit, I'd fast pass it twice with 60. I run straight acoss the ends with old flat 60 or 80 (halves the edging time and effort). I never ever use the machine without a belt (Not that awful string they ship with the Hummel, a propper leather weight belt crossed over at the handles), I wouls sooner run the machine without a dust bag than without a belt which I consider an intergral part of the relationship with the machine/instrument. That's just me thought (and every floor sander in NZ and Australia I've ever worked with or employed). Love your videos, I really enjoy them and appreciate your effort.
@HowToSandAFloor2 жыл бұрын
Man, I need to do a video using a Hummel without a dust bag 🤣🤣 that would be great
@HowToSandAFloor2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your comment Peter. What I’d really love is, instead of a belt, a harness that goes under the arms and over the shoulders, and connects at he middle of your chest. Pulling from the waist takes so much power out of it. I have had a few comments saying they wouldn’t do it without the belt. Maybe I should give it another try. Why don’t you like using it without the belt?
@peterkotara2 жыл бұрын
@@HowToSandAFloor Without the belt the machine applies too much load to your back, the belt allows you to use your hands and arms to apply twist and load to the handles whilst maintaining constant uniform speed. All the load is handled by your legs and hips.
@tsetendorjee9040 Жыл бұрын
This is an excellent explanation and demonstration KZbin, we love it and thank you very much!!!❤❤❤👌👌👌
@progdog46142 жыл бұрын
Been crosscutting for surfaces caused by this density and relevel problem only on a much larger scale All your explanations how waves are caused and cured are true I have had to repair these problems as my work required for over 45 years I agree with what you say and proved it many times
@_redpillbill Жыл бұрын
You definitely saved my floor boards, my time, machine hire and materials. Your a good man, thank you. 🙏💪👊👍
@danieldeblois92297 ай бұрын
Very rare to see something on youtube that is really well explained ! Really brilliant
@griz21662 жыл бұрын
Very good explanation and demonstration. 👍 With a typical 3 cut sanding I cross cut to the right, then left and then straight for the final sanding. I've tried explaining this to my boss and coworkers, just to get cut off with the same arguments about scratch and track marks. Keep it up!
@drAgonflysix210 ай бұрын
Your technic makes all the sense necessary to fix the problem , thanks for sharing brother.
@roblongworth52395 ай бұрын
I’m glad I’ve watched your video that explains a lot & makes sense. I’m now going to do our floor with your method. Thanks so much 👍
@kevinmazzarini2200 Жыл бұрын
I like that you’re addressing the different density of boards versus the pressure being applied to them. Another thing to think about…. When you switch papers also switch which wall you start on to make the longer pass vs the shorter pass. You don’t want to leave stop marks in the same place especially if you’re going to do 4 different papers.
@HowToSandAFloor Жыл бұрын
bingo 👍
@kevinmazzarini2200 Жыл бұрын
@@HowToSandAFloor I also wanted to say Thank you for replying to my comments.
@renoor9 ай бұрын
I came here just to thank you for putting the basic idea right there in the thumbnail.
@HLXanthus2 жыл бұрын
Absolutely! I always sand my first cuts (multi cuts because I sand gymnasiums so lots of poly to contend with) at about a 10-20° angle and then straighten up on my follow-up cuts. Just have to be sure to get any angle scratches back up first!
@HowToSandAFloor2 жыл бұрын
Sounds good to me! Many gym sanders only go straight
@HLXanthus2 жыл бұрын
@@HowToSandAFloor agreed. 28 years in the industry and most other guys think I am nutz for doing it. It also helps flatten a floor that has high/low spots or cupping.
@diverdave4056Ай бұрын
50 years ago we would strip the hardwood floors at my grade school using a buffer with pads made out of steel wool... as long as you kept the machine moving and laying flat = NO DIPS !
@Tezukuri8 ай бұрын
I totally get this. Thanks for your in depth analysis. I come from a ceramics background. We learn pretty early to smooth out hand thrown pots, ya gotta use your tool at an angle to even out the ridges and canyons created by the pulling of a pot through your fingers. Really, well down presentation of how to get a true mirror finished floor.
@c19curfew2 жыл бұрын
You are making a lot of sense. Thank you for sharing your experience with us. Here's something to consider: Could you make a video without any music? Just soften the sound of the sped up videos if you have to. Compare the results. You might also add few flashes or 'surprises' in between the sped up portions while the audio stays consistent with the sped up portion..
@nate2807 Жыл бұрын
Redoing the floor was some legit hard work, though after seeing the great results that came from listening to your advice and wisdom, it's actually quite satisfying work. Would definitely have been a nightmare though to have done essentially the same amount of work, but with poor technique or even good technique but after just a few moments of doing something wrong, and end up with a floor that needs to be fixed. Here on KZbin, there is a lot of bad advice. There is also some decent or even very good advice but which lacks depth of explanation. And then there's your videos, that have solid advice AND in-depth explanations that address the subtleties that make all the difference. Thanks. I know I didn't pay to have you do my floors in-person, though I feel like I owe you a beer or something for all the helpful videos. KZbin should add a beer can emoji next to the thumbs up, that links to Venmo.
@five-forty3431 Жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@spig3547 Жыл бұрын
As a woodworker going diagonal is stanard when doing a lot of things (except planing) a lot of woodworkers will hand sand diagonally. Thought I'd add also we will run a pencil over areas were sanding to make sure were getting down to level.
@fly662 жыл бұрын
Great video but two errors I solved on engineered floors. 3:14 One: sand only four boards before turning to the other direction. NEVER start with any sheet lower than a 80 grit. I use ultra Matt now it’s a fantastic finish. Only took me 25 years to perfect this.
@HowToSandAFloor2 жыл бұрын
What are my errors?
@anthonycosares82342 ай бұрын
Hey so I’m a carpenter who primarily works in cabinetry but I’ve done my fair share of refinishing and furniture building as well. I agree with you that while attempting to flatten any surface whether that is a table top or a floor, it is always better to go in a diagonal direction rather than straight with the grain. But I just want to make sure that you are only referring to the first( and possibly second) passes with the belt sander. So for the first sanding pass at 36-40 grit we go with a diagonal pass , and perhaps the second pass as well with a 60 grit paper. Also I’d like to mention that this should be done in a criss cross pattern to achieve a flat surface. But then all following finish passes with 80-120 grit paper should definatley be done with the grain in my opinion to hide as much of the sanding marks as possible. Would you agree with this ? Also the final final pass should be done with either a random orbit or buffer sander rather than a belt sander( as you show here). So basically I just want to confirm that you’re talking about the first and perhaps second pass only when you are doing the diagonal passes..?
@keithgardner38652 жыл бұрын
Awesome info. My dad sanded his 100 year old floors back in 1979 and he sanded twice on a diagonal. No ripples
@NicoSmets2 жыл бұрын
I don't have a wood floor. But man, this kind of dedication in making videos: I'm subscribing.
@HowToSandAFloor2 жыл бұрын
Thank you Nico! 🍻
@wildebeest88 Жыл бұрын
Very good demonstration. Your comments are 100% correct. Never sand linear in line with the planks. There is wear and tear on wood especially at opening or doorways to also consider, which will be difficult to eliminate if not sanded at an angle across the long end.
@TootEmCarMan2 жыл бұрын
I am a luthier and what you have to say makes sense. Planing often gets the best results on a wavy board if used at an angle. One thing you said was wrong tho! You don't hoover unless you are using a Hoover product. You vacuum'd the floor. A small point but you said you were doing things correctly. 😉
@edvinjansson18372 жыл бұрын
I was so excited to see the finish of the correctly sanded floor and you ended the video without showing us. I am watching this video right before bedtime, I don't know if I'm gonna be able to sleep tonight :(
@catrinasanchez18992 жыл бұрын
The marker illustration was brilliant!!!! Brought it all together
@HowToSandAFloor2 жыл бұрын
glad to hear that because it seemed kind of silly at the time 😁
@Keiseru9 ай бұрын
My contractor used a big oscillating/rotary floor sander from beginning to end when he did my living room. The result was perfect - incredible flatness! I think they're the most common to use here in Sweden. Don't see them in a lot of English language home renovation shows though. Why are they noy used more?
@joostkamphuis859 ай бұрын
This video is helpful to provide insight in the variables when sanding. I have a short history in car body repair and applying that experience this makes sense. The amount of material removed is huge and I can imagine that during sanding with 40 grit you need to be very careful with not leaving the machine too long in a spot. In such a case a cross sand would also remove that. I can also imagine a large orbital sander would remove a lot of those dimples. I guess as long as you finish with a final pass in the grain direction it should be ok. I just wonder if a 40 to 80 step would work to reduce the amount of material to be removed. I learned that you can do max steps of 100 to remove the scratches of the previous grit.
@LMFAO071025 күн бұрын
If that's not the norm, this is brilliantly simple. Only someone with a truly critical mind would troubleshoot this. I thank you, I just bought my home and I have many projects I want to take on DIY style! This is one of them, it has Original wood from 1967, I want to keep the wood but it has never been corrected. So I will re-seal and refinish the wood. If you read this, let me know if you have any tips, if though this was over two years ago lol!
@lhpl2 жыл бұрын
Amazing results. Funny how the right method always seems obvious in hindsight, and yet some so-called "professionals" insist on doing it wrong.
@regankaldahl84962 ай бұрын
Yet they are doing it for a living and must make the customers happy before they get paid also?? Yes there can be times you run your sander at a angle to get the floor flat but once that is acheaved than you sand with the grain so you don't get cross sanding marks.
@grahamforrester-p3t Жыл бұрын
hi, great video, can the same technic be applied to an old Georgian wooden floor?
@HowToSandAFloor Жыл бұрын
All floors 👌🏻
@MacAndGeez9 ай бұрын
Sold on this method, but the ending really drove it home. First with the grain, then again at a 15⁰ angle. Then years of experience, haha
@gundersonflooringanddesign406410 ай бұрын
Helpful tip. If you're going to cut your floors diagonally use the finer grits to start with then you could go back to your 40 grit for straight sanding. Saves for lots of deep scratches
@benjaminzedrine2 жыл бұрын
I did metal not floors. But yeah always cut out on an angle. Nothing is ever going to be dead flat. But you can get the reflection to appear as though it is if you cut out. Strait all the way all it's doing as you drop down the grits is further accenting those scallops. Then rotary buff them in! I like your work.
@andrewe28532 жыл бұрын
Makes perfect sense I can see you've used trial and error to find the the sweet spot the come up with the fix. Well done, I'm a handy man and a problem solver, when I was seven years old I had to take the wheel of my bike without a shifter so I came up with the idea to use two screwdrivers flat head, and some rope I think you can get the idea, and thats how I knew I wanted to be a problem solver slash handyman then I went on to learn everything I could so as I say, good job well done.
@charlesclark21512 жыл бұрын
Excellent video! I've been sanding floors for 10 years here in the US. The first 5 years I had no idea about sanding needing to be done at a 15 to 45 degree angle. ( Except for the final grit). 5 years ago I bought my own Hummel. It comes with an instruction manual. Comes with 2 actually. I like most sanders thought I knew EVERYTHING about sanding! I figured I'd read the manual. No harm no foul. I was blown away when I learned about floors NEEDING to be sanded at a particular degree (angle). Needless to say this has greatly reduced the waves or chatter look on floor. Just like this guy here describes. Never think you know everything, or you can't learn a new & better way to sand floors. I tell every sander I know & meet about this. As I see EVERY sander (most with a decade minimum experience) sanding straight forward. Not to mention ALL the KZbin videos doing it incorrectly as well. This information is in the Lagler sanding of floors manual on page 23. I wish I could include pics of manual in this post. I'm sure this info is on Lagler website as well if you do not own the operation manual. Our customers pay us TOO much $$ for us to not give them the absolute best job we are capable of. Please don't be too stubborn to learn new ( technically not new but correct) ways to make ur floors turn out with the best results possible. Our customers deserve that. Here's a few more basic tips (these should be WELL known & obvious for career sanders). ALWAYS sand left to right. I see videos on KZbin where someone doesn't do this & in comment section ppl let pro sander know this. Guy always says he set his machine up to sand right to left, because I guess he's embarrassed he's sanding floors wrong for years. THIS CAN NOT BE DONE! Hummel's can't be set up to sand right to left! Another common sense tip. NEVER skip a grit. It's not 40 to 80 grit. It's 40,60,80 to 100 if you prefer 100. Again, read the manual to know why skipping a grit is bad. It's in there. Never stop learning! Thanks to this guy for his videos.
@HowToSandAFloor2 жыл бұрын
Cheers 🍻the amount of times I’ve had this argument and I’m just like… read the manual 🤣 it’s right there.
@kamoke12 жыл бұрын
What a comment - thanks for taking the time to type that out!
@johnhouli3450 Жыл бұрын
Thank you. That first sanding I will not be doing, what u would like to k ow is can I screen with large orbiting sander with 120 grit sandpaper to remove all my oil base polyurethane and then vacuum tach and apply Pre Stain then wait 1 hour and apply stain then wipe off then let dry 24 hours then apply Water base high end finish. Two coats maybe 3. Thank you
@toditron2 жыл бұрын
I discovered this fact myself on accident when refinishing a floor. I'm happy to see this post confirming it.
@SethCorbinMusic8 күн бұрын
I appreciate your dedication to your craft. I respect it.
@BluesAlmighty2 жыл бұрын
Btw, wet brushing a teak (ship) deck must also be done accross the grains and not in parallel/along
@BobbyFrederick-i6l Жыл бұрын
This is exactly the same process cabinet makers use with a hand held belt sander to flatten glued up panels. I have told "Professionals" this and they think I'm crazy. Glad to see someone else is crazy like me.
@patrickotuel6904 Жыл бұрын
Understanding the Science of a project, separates Craftsmen from jobbers. Quite an inspiriting video, Thank You.
@williambartholomew56802 жыл бұрын
Interesting indeed, I refinished and finished new floors many times without flaw but then again when I broke out that style sander it was only to remove pre-existing finish or level new boards and I made light passes to help mitigate any issues. Afterwards we relied on a few grit levels of sanding attachments for the buffer to do the real sanding to prep for finish like you do around the edges with edge/rotary sanders.
@hannahstclair027 ай бұрын
Thank you for this. About to DIY a floor. So glad I found this video. Watching all your content 😊
@thedude731910 ай бұрын
I love that youtube have expert craftmen, you can see easy tricks to do better quality work
@LTVoyager Жыл бұрын
It would have been nice to see the floor finished again to see how much improvement there was. Not seeing the end result makes me wonder if this technique makes all that much difference.
@martincleeves42382 жыл бұрын
Im living in germany and here many professionals use just a rotary sander or start useing one when they get to 120 grit ,seems to work nicely
@thytrin21032 жыл бұрын
Someone that knows their trade and not afraid to tell it how it is! I love it.
@kcstott2 жыл бұрын
From my toolmakers point of view, we sand and polish steel by changing directions every grit. this does two things. it high lights the previous grit scratches and it prevents digging those previous courser scratches deeper creating ripples just like you example on the floor. I also do gun work and we do not sand gun stocks in one direction all the time for the same reason. what ever imperfection you put in the wood from the first sanding if you do not change direction with grit you will just make the imperfection worse. Great video
@BarbarianBard2 жыл бұрын
That’s the thing, doesn’t matter how many years of experience you have if you keep messing up and that goes for everything. My grandpa had a saying “if job is worth doing it’s worth doing right” he told my dad that saying and my dad told me. I never got to meet my grandpa (passed away when I was a year and a half old) but though stories he became something of an idol to me.
@MacabreMosaic Жыл бұрын
Helps a lot to take ur time with the trio between drum sandings as well. I’ve known some folks who don’t even use a trio or anything and they’ll have that ripple effect when all is said done
@z.a.dewitt86642 жыл бұрын
Can I just say that you're the reason I'm afraid to post videos about the stairs I've done? I already know they're shit, but I'm terrified of you seeing them! I say that with much love, learned a ton from ya. Thank you for what you do.
@HowToSandAFloor2 жыл бұрын
Haha, I only criticise the people that post videos teaching people “how to” when they don’t know themselves.
@brandons9398 Жыл бұрын
I really like your approach, you don’t cloud it with BS! Would the same sanding technique apply to 70 year old, white oak floors, 2 1/2 inches wide?
@danh-or5nt Жыл бұрын
Great explanation and demonstration, Thanks! I can see why you used a dark stain and semi-gloss to show the imperfections more clearly for your video. It occurred to me that, if you use a lighter stain and a low gloss satin finish, this may make the imperfections less apparent. Is that correct?
@Andy-ib6xd2 жыл бұрын
Very good information!! Well done friend!! I've got a badly damaged 2nd floor in a 1920's downtown building i'm creating gathering room up there and need all the help I can get !!
@glynnepritchard25262 жыл бұрын
Im a Civil Engineer and cabinet maker, you are 100% correct. Look at roads, look around manholes, youll find a rise and dip due to differing densities. The same principle is would on unpaved roads, usually called corrugations.
@ohwhatworld58512 жыл бұрын
I don't understand. So do we sand the floor at an angle, and then sand it straight to get the scratches out?... Also, if we are sanding a floor with no ripples/waves, do we still sand it at an angle, and then straight? And wouldn't sanding it straight on afterwards just make the waves/ripples we are trying to avoid in the first place? Confused.
@broncoramfan2 жыл бұрын
My ex boss was scared of going diagonal. He said you'll never get the scratches out. When he would sand maybe he would go too fast or use wrong grit when trying to take off scratches. I never had issue removing diagonal scratches when I would need to flatten an area. I always wanted to learn new, easier, faster and/ or better techniques. Ex boss was set in his old ways
@HowToSandAFloor2 жыл бұрын
Same as my old boss, I completely understand
@Atilla20002 жыл бұрын
Guess ge was one of the ppl i talked about in my comment, that theoreticly know how but dont got the fine sense so use a Hummel propper😅?!?
@nate2807 Жыл бұрын
This is such an accurate point in this video. It's exceptional, the level of analysis and explanation you gives. I think so many folks are already a bit nervous when redoing their floor, and since there are so many folks who continue to say you should go with the grain always, that DIYers are just a little too hesitant to deviate from that "advice." I just did my floors. I think they look great because I did some research and paid crazy attention to detail since I've never done this before. Although, I saw this video after my first couple cuts, and in a really tight spot between the island and oven/fridge, I have some minor flaws that this technique would have eliminated. Awesome videos though! And definitely helped. Three other flaws... a damn mosquito got in the poly (my kids say in a few million years, they'll extract the DNA to recreate some animals that exist today). Also, while staining, I put my sweaty arm down over a towel, but the sweat went thru the towel and into the wood. I didn't notice and even though it dried, the stain became a little darker where my arm was. I totally didn't expect that. It's not noticeable unless I point it out, but it's a thing. And a few drops of water (or beer) from the sink got on the floor and resulted in a few dark drop-sized spots. I can live with that and it's covered by a rug.
@christianvalenza7354 Жыл бұрын
Been sanding for a long time, thanks for the demo, I came across your style long ago when I started. I knew the physics, going forward at about 15 degrees from the finish point of my backwards pull, forward smooths it out and straight back straightens the grain simply because of the greater resistance put on the floor when pulling back, and if you are a pro you disc sand at 120 with a buffer for your finishes.
@mhpjii2 жыл бұрын
Excellent. A professional who discerns and cares. Good for you!
@ricardoramirez1472 Жыл бұрын
yes that was pretty helpful now I would like to leave my floor unfinished with no staining but I don't want food, juice or coffee etc stain so what can I seal it with do you know what can I seal the wood
@crewcalls7 күн бұрын
What time is best to go diagonally!? All of them, or the first few and then Finish strait on? Please explain the best time to go diagonally if only one out of the 4 grit Sandings. If it’s all of them that’s cool too. I just wanted to be clear on that. Thx
@felixsinteco7344 Жыл бұрын
Sou Brasileiro, moro em Salvador Bahia... trabalho com isso e seu vídeo me ajudou bastante, acredito que na cidade onde moro ninguém sabe disso... obrigado!