Question
I am using a satin (Mohawk) dura coat pre-cat lacquer on a wall unit. It's going to be applied on mahogany plywood and hardwood with a wipe-on mahogany stain. It almost has a plum touch to it. This is my first attempt to spray. I used to paint cars way back, so I have a small clue. I just need some tips. How many coats? Does it run? Can you repair a mistake? Do you sand in between coats or not at all? Can you use furniture polish on it when completed? It seems that, from the retailer, you sand with 220-320, wipe on the stain, let dry however long that is. Then spray one super light coat, then two more regular coats. Does this sound right?
Forum Responses
(Finishing Forum)
First of all, after applying stain, you should wait 24 hours before spraying the lacquer. Yes, it will run if applied too thick. Three coats will be sufficient. You need to buff in between coats and you can fix mistakes, but it's not necessarily easy. It's easier to fix the first coat than it is the second or third. More often than not, you'll end up sanding it all down when mistakes are made on a second or third coat.
150 grit is a good general use sandpaper before applying a wiping stain. Some brands recommend 120 grit for their wiping stain. Some stains are ready to be topcoated in under an hour and some take a lot longer; check the directions or data sheet.
If you're not going to use a vinyl or sanding sealer over the stain, you may want to thin the first coat of finish by 20% or so to promote it sealing the pores. Once dry, sand very lightly to smooth, and spray the next coat. Scuff sand the 2nd coat as needed and spray the 3rd. You should be done.
A lot of pre-cat lacquers have a maximum dry film thickness. Usually, 3 regular coats will get you there, so you don't want to spray too many. If you spray too heavily, you will get sags/runs.
Comment from contributor J:
I'm working on a cherry jewelry box right now, and have found that sanding the wood all the way up to 3600 grit gives fantastic results when staining. There are no blotches at all, and the stain adheres just as well if you sanded it with 180 or something. Any higher than that though, and the wood tends to have a glossy sheen, and lacquer doesn't like to adhere to the wood.
I use a kit from micromesh to sand my final coat of lacquer to a mirror finish. It’s a kit that has 1500 grit all the way up to 12,000 grit, and it works wonders. As for the sanding, I would go ahead and knock the orange peel off with 320 grit, then spray your second coat. The solvents in the second coat of lacquer will liquefy the coat beneath it, which is why you can't put 5 or 6 coats of lacquer on. You don't have to go crazy with the sanding, just enough to get the first coat flat.