Help Needed With How To Use Deck Stain

   / Help Needed With How To Use Deck Stain #11  
   / Help Needed With How To Use Deck Stain #12  
So on this topic.....I have a deck I made out of PT wood. 2x4 & 1x5 deck boards. It's been out in the weather for appx 2.5 yrs and is grayed. No cover - just out in full sun/rain/snow/whatever it's doing outside....

Before staining, I should......?

Pressure wash?
Spray with bleach?
Sand?
Just sweep it off?

This is a flat platform 8 x 18 - basically just a few inches off ground sitting on concrete pavers just to keep it out of direct ground contact.

To stain it am thinking of just using the $12 HF electric spray gun. Not sure what product to use....I'm less concerned with pretty and more concerned with what will protect the best and be the least maintenance (if I didn't have to redo it for a decade that would be great). Something like Thompson's tinted water seal ~$20/gal good? Most of the other sealer/stain combos are a lot more $.
 
   / Help Needed With How To Use Deck Stain #13  
I wouldn't do anything to them. Really regret using a stain on our new deck wood. Should have left it bare. Had to replace several boards last year. Left them bare.

Ralph
 
   / Help Needed With How To Use Deck Stain
  • Thread Starter
#14  
I wouldn't do anything to them. Really regret using a stain on our new deck wood. Should have left it bare. Had to replace several boards last year. Left them bare.

Ralph

We have had a wood deck for 25-30 years,,
about every 5 years, I pressure wash it,, then my wife puts some stain etc,,, on the deck.

My wife would never let the deck go unfinished,, just due to appearance,,

She really likes staining,, that is why I never was involved with that,,,
 
   / Help Needed With How To Use Deck Stain #15  
In my opinion there is nothing ugly of a nice greyed aged deck.
But that's my opinion.
As long as a deck is safe and solid that's all that is important to me.
That being said I do like to spray some silicone to shed water as that is what rots the wood.
My present deck is going on25 years now and as solid as the day I built it.
LOL, last summer we hosted a fair gang and the deck was 'wall to wall' with folks and they joked that since Bob (me) built it they were safe.
OK. perhaps I'll change one or two deck boards this summer. (due to bad grain)

As to stain, IMHO most stains simply trap water and that is what rots the decking.(especially opaque stains)
When I was in the renovation /building trade I'd suggest the clients simply treat the decks every few years with a fresh coat of preservative to prolong the life.
 
   / Help Needed With How To Use Deck Stain #16  
Look on the can and you will probably find that the product is mostly wax or paraffin dissolved in solvents like mineral spirits (though they may try to disguise it with chemical terms - a photo of the label or product name would help). Not really a stain, but a protectant, of sorts. The thing is, none of those really do much of anything, don't last and make you repeat it constantly. The one advantage you have is that those are vertical parts, so water won't sit on them like on deck boards so much, so it will hold up better here.
 
   / Help Needed With How To Use Deck Stain #17  
So on this topic.....I have a deck I made out of PT wood. 2x4 & 1x5 deck boards. It's been out in the weather for appx 2.5 yrs and is grayed. No cover - just out in full sun/rain/snow/whatever it's doing outside....

Before staining, I should......?

Pressure wash?
Spray with bleach?
Sand?
Just sweep it off?

This is a flat platform 8 x 18 - basically just a few inches off ground sitting on concrete pavers just to keep it out of direct ground contact.

To stain it am thinking of just using the $12 HF electric spray gun. Not sure what product to use....I'm less concerned with pretty and more concerned with what will protect the best and be the least maintenance (if I didn't have to redo it for a decade that would be great). Something like Thompson's tinted water seal ~$20/gal good? Most of the other sealer/stain combos are a lot more $.

Tompson’s is terrible. Great marketing poor product unless you like pressure washing and reapplying every few years. I used to pressure was decks mostly with just water. You can do a bleach mix but I never did and got great results. With that new of wood I bet water and 3,500 psi pressure washer does great job no bleach needed.

There is a technique for pressure washing otherwise you scar the wood. I’m sure you can YouTube it but leave it for a split second too long on one spot you leave a line/lines. If you’re not particular and then use dark stain you don’t notice.

That being said you maybe could get by with some bleach or other wood cleaner to spray/brush lightly and rinse..since wood isn’t old.

I liked the oil based stains best, but you gotta roll or brush and it’s a pain. Roll and back brush for good coverage . Otherwise tape everything around with plastic and get a good (or rent one) airless sprayer if you want good coverage. Otherwise you could get spots depending what stain you use with a sprayer. But if you have no vertical uppers just roll and back brush as needed. You will fill a little can often.

I stained our rental deck with sherwin Williams solid special sun resistant stain (I want it to last!) and thought it covered nicely. It’s just terrible doing mid summer high humidity....don’t be that guy like i did last summer. I was flipping the rental... Do it with no rain for a few days when it’s cool (70s) max out. Otherwise it gets hot and terrible fast. Ha

I’d check out sherwin Williams or Benjamin Moore do it will last longer whatever you use. I don’t understand what someone says about preservative.. I will ask them.
 
   / Help Needed With How To Use Deck Stain #18  
In my opinion there is nothing ugly of a nice greyed aged deck.
But that's my opinion.
As long as a deck is safe and solid that's all that is important to me.
That being said I do like to spray some silicone to shed water as that is what rots the wood.
My present deck is going on25 years now and as solid as the day I built it.
LOL, last summer we hosted a fair gang and the deck was 'wall to wall' with folks and they joked that since Bob (me) built it they were safe.
OK. perhaps I'll change one or two deck boards this summer. (due to bad grain)

As to stain, IMHO most stains simply trap water and that is what rots the decking.(especially opaque stains)
When I was in the renovation /building trade I'd suggest the clients simply treat the decks every few years with a fresh coat of preservative to prolong the life.

Preservative like a water or oil based sealer? Clear I’m guessing.. trap the water like it sits on the wood in spots?
 
   / Help Needed With How To Use Deck Stain #19  
Often deck problems originate from wood selection or rather which side should be up.
As wood 'cures' often it will curl and form a cup shape and that will retain some water which then soaks the board somewhat.
In other words deck boards should come labeled 'this side up', LOL.
Unfortunately poorer grades often have the nicest looking side on the wrong correct grain side.
Also comes what grade or variety of wood is use with pine the most common but then there are many different varieties of pine.
For instance white or grey pine vs ponderosa etc.
Heck some unscrupulous mills might even pass off spruce as 'treated decking' and that'll simply rot away all by itself.

Reminds me of a time when merchants were selling 'landscape' RR ties, shucks they were birch dipped in a 'preservative while still green.
Most lasted all of about 4-5 years.
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

2000 MACK RD688 TRI AXLE DUMP  TRUCK (A51222)
2000 MACK RD688...
Friesen 110 Seed Tender (A50515)
Friesen 110 Seed...
2004 CATERPILLAR 963C CRAWLER LOADER (A51242)
2004 CATERPILLAR...
2018 John Deere 524K-II Articulated Wheel Loader (A50322)
2018 John Deere...
2016 FORD F-350 XL SUPER DUTY CREW CAB FLATBED (A51243)
2016 FORD F-350 XL...
2018 Ford F-150 4x4 Crew Cab Pickup Truck (A50323)
2018 Ford F-150...
 
Top