What to treat proch floor with.

   / What to treat proch floor with. #1  

N80

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The porch on my log cabin is floored with 2x6 pressure treated boards spaced about nails width apart (like a deck). The cabin is 4+ years old and the porch floor is getting weathered looking. What should I treat it with? It is covered, obviously, by the porch roof but the porch is otherwise open. The floor catches a good bit of windblown rain (need a gutter on the porch roof, but that's another story) but it also catches the sun all day long, winter and summer and the sun may be weathering them as much as the rain.

What should I do? I could put water seal on them. Which brand? What's the best and cheapest? (I know, I know.)

Can you paint PT lumber? Would you?

I've got the stain we use on the log walls, but it is thick and oily. Might not be great for flooring, I don't know though. Its expensive too.

Any thoughts would be appreciated.
 
   / What to treat proch floor with. #2  
All that i do is bleach,pressure wash and coat with Thompsons water seal every spring.I did paint some pressure treated wood once but it didnt last but a couple of years.
 
   / What to treat proch floor with. #3  
My two cents, feel free to ignore.
Oil based stain will make water bead up, usually, and can be very exciting to walk on when wet.
Pressure treated lumber can usually be painted after it has weathered a bit to take the chemicals off the surface. Make sure it is a "porch and floor" type paint. Mixing a little sand in with the paint can improve traction.
I don't have much experience with wood sealers, but they sure do look pretty in the commercials:D .
 
   / What to treat proch floor with.
  • Thread Starter
#4  
bamatoolmaker said:
All that i do is bleach,pressure wash and coat with Thompsons water seal every spring.I did paint some pressure treated wood once but it didnt last but a couple of years.

Why and how do you bleach it? Is this for mildew/fungus? If I don't see any mildew do I still need to bleach it?
 
   / What to treat proch floor with. #5  
N80 said:
Why and how do you bleach it? Is this for mildew/fungus? If I don't see any mildew do I still need to bleach it?

I mix generic bleach and water using about 1:4 ratio.Put it in a pump sprayer and wet it down,let it sit about 15 min and rinse with water.It will help control the mildew and will remove dirt without scrubbing.The wood will still rot underneath if you do not treat it, if it is exposed to the elements.This recipe is a whole lot cheaper than the store bought cleaners and works just as well.
 
   / What to treat proch floor with.
  • Thread Starter
#6  
Thanks.

I'll look into porch paint to, but coverage between the boards etc would be tough so I don't think I'll go that route.
 
   / What to treat proch floor with. #7  
Can you just leave it alone? I like the weathered look of wood for most porch flooring. And it is maintenance-free. My deck is pressure treated 2x6 also and is 20 years old and is not covered and will still be in good shape for years to come. Any kind of coating you put on it will shortly start to peel, fade, wear off, etc and need redoing every year to look nice.

When my deck boards start rotting after about 30 years I will just replace them. This will be much easier and cheaper than coating them every year.
 
   / What to treat proch floor with. #8  
Is not the idea of PT wood not to paint? I was told if you want it to rot or deteriate paint it or seal it? I don't know, just asking. I too have the wrap around porch on my 16 year old home. When my wife ask if the porch should be cleaned? I also take the bleach formula, followed with the pressure washer and it restores the look to near new. It is raised about 16" setting on piers, no wood to ground contact and like I said 16 yrs old and yet to replace the first board! I quess that is working ....
 
   / What to treat proch floor with. #9  
I haven't done this George, but I've seen the finished product.

If you pressure wash first, it may bring back the color that the wood was when you first put it down, or at least somewhat like that.

After you've done that and it dries, I've know a guy who used oil based polyurethane, HOWEVER, silica (basically cleaned, store bought, white sand) was added to the urethane prior to putting it down. This gives it a non-skid type texture.

Supposedly it will last for years, whereas even the best deck treatments don't last but maybe a year or two.

I'm not sure...sounds like a great concept. I was thinking about doing it to my back deck.

I don't know the mixture ratio of poly to sand. I do know they put it down with a roller. I've seen it, it looks great.

Podunk
 
   / What to treat proch floor with. #10  
Generally speaking, wood doesn't rot if it can dry. So, if you paint the top and the bottom has good air movement, the wood should be able to dry. The places to watch on decks is the gaps over the joists. Dirt collects in this spot and then the wood stays moist because you basically have mud.

I would not hesitate to paint a seasoned PT porch. Don't paint it until it's seasoned wood -- especially if you're painting only on one side. Otherwise it will get desperate to leap off your porch in a twisted mess, or worse, it will wait for you to set down a beer and then it will spring loose the screws and launch your beer into the cow pasture where your holstein will pick it up with it's lips and drink it down. Cows like beer and that cow will be after you from then on wanting another. Don't ask me how I know this.

Cliff
 

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