Deck stain coverage

/ Deck stain coverage #1  

JDgreen227

Super Member
Joined
Nov 2, 2003
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8,272
Location
Central Michigan
Tractor
4210 MFWD Ehydro--'89 JD 318
About two hours ago, I finished putting the second coat of stain on my big deck and stairs. I first primed about 40 square feet of bare wood and places where the 5 year old stain was thin, then applied two thick coats atop that, each one a week apart. The coverage the stain I chose amazed me, counting the prime coat on the bare spots as 20 square feet per coat, I covered a very closely measured 320 square feet each time. And the amount of stain I used for the entire project was less than A GALLON AND A HALF, TOTAL.

I have used this stain in the past, and cannot say enough to praise it. A little goes a long, long way, it levels easily, and dries so fast you can walk on it in an hour. A custom mixed gallon at Lowes costs about $35 with tax, and it is worth every penny, and then some.
 

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/ Deck stain coverage #2  
I used a stain sealer, the second coat wouldn't even soak in!!

I cant even remember what I used, wasn't something from the box stores, it was something recommended on the web as being pretty darn good. drags getting older:laughing:
 
/ Deck stain coverage
  • Thread Starter
#3  
I used a stain sealer, the second coat wouldn't even soak in!!

I cant even remember what I used, wasn't something from the box stores, it was something recommended on the web as being pretty darn good. drags getting older:laughing:

Label on the can of the stain I used says coverage is 150-250 square feet per gallon, I was amazed at how much coverage I actually got.
 
/ Deck stain coverage #4  
JD, I know what you mean, I over bought last time and ended up giving a gallon to my brother.
 
/ Deck stain coverage #5  
About two hours ago, I finished putting the second coat of stain on my big deck and stairs. I first primed about 40 square feet of bare wood and places where the 5 year old stain was thin, then applied two thick coats atop that, each one a week apart. The coverage the stain I chose amazed me, counting the prime coat on the bare spots as 20 square feet per coat, I covered a very closely measured 320 square feet each time. And the amount of stain I used for the entire project was less than A GALLON AND A HALF, TOTAL.

I have used this stain in the past, and cannot say enough to praise it. A little goes a long, long way, it levels easily, and dries so fast you can walk on it in an hour. A custom mixed gallon at Lowes costs about $35 with tax, and it is worth every penny, and then some.

What do you mean you primed it? and then stained over the primer?

I need to redo mine after about 5 years now. I used the tinted Thompson's last time and it held up pretty good. There is no way to do 2 coats. The second one would just bead up and blow away!
 
/ Deck stain coverage
  • Thread Starter
#6  
What do you mean you primed it? and then stained over the primer?

I need to redo mine after about 5 years now. I used the tinted Thompson's last time and it held up pretty good. There is no way to do 2 coats. The second one would just bead up and blow away!

There were a lot of areas on the deck that the stain had been worn away from because of snow shoveling, etc. Meant I primed the bare spots with the stain, so the topcoats would level properly. Since the stain I used was acylic water based, it doesn't really soak into the wood like an oil base product would. Calling it "stain" is somewhat misleading.
 
/ Deck stain coverage #7  
Calling it "stain" is somewhat misleading.

Exactly what I was thinking. . . I wonder what the difference is by definition between paint and stain? I always thought that stain penetrated the surface more than paint, but acrylic latex would seem to scream PAINT to me.:confused:
 
/ Deck stain coverage
  • Thread Starter
#8  
Exactly what I was thinking. . . I wonder what the difference is by definition between paint and stain? I always thought that stain penetrated the surface more than paint, but acrylic latex would seem to scream PAINT to me.:confused:

Agree with you there...a solid color, as the picture of the can of "stain" I used, is basically paint. To me, real stain changes the color of bare wood, and can ONLY be applied to bare wood, or over itself.
 
/ Deck stain coverage #9  
Sounds like I should have used that instead of the Behr stain I bought at HD. It took 3 heavy coats to do my barn, using a solid color stain.
 
/ Deck stain coverage
  • Thread Starter
#10  
Sounds like I should have used that instead of the Behr stain I bought at HD. It took 3 heavy coats to do my barn, using a solid color stain.

Much of the reason I got such good coverage was because the deck had been coated before, and pressure treated pine isn't very pourous to begin with. About 15 years ago I used a solid color stain, Thompson's, on rough sawn wood siding, and it took a lot of stain for the first coat.
 
/ Deck stain coverage #11  
I used the behr stain from home desperate, it covered in one coat, flowed well through a paint sprayer and matched what we had. Now when painting the top of the deck I use a paint roller (afterpowerwashing it and letting it dry) with a broom handle on it. I get it done in no time. The paint sprayer is worth its weight in gold for lattice and fenceing.
 
/ Deck stain coverage
  • Thread Starter
#12  
I used the behr stain from home desperate, it covered in one coat, flowed well through a paint sprayer and matched what we had. Now when painting the top of the deck I use a paint roller (afterpowerwashing it and letting it dry) with a broom handle on it. I get it done in no time. The paint sprayer is worth its weight in gold for lattice and fenceing.

The PVC rails I installed on both our decks (12X23 and 12X16, with 3 stairs) set me back $1400, while treated wood railings would have been maybe $300. Yet everytime I have to clean, sand, and stain the decks, I consider the extra money well spent, because the railings need nothing but cleaning.

Don't laugh, but when I cleaned and stained my step mom's wood deck and railings, I used several of these small pad painters on the railings and other areas where a brush would be impractical or too large. They work great.
 

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/ Deck stain coverage #13  
A friend of ours went with the "plastic" and wood fibered lumber for a small part of their deck that was rotting out. Looks great, and the fact that you dont have to do anything to it is a big plus.
 
/ Deck stain coverage #14  
My 20 x 24 deck has treated wood decking but I splurged on wrought iron railing. I wasn't much more than building with wood but I haven't touched it since I installed it. One of these days I might have to paint it, but it is 8 years old now and looks good.
 

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