Well, first off you should know or tell us what is on your stand now, is it an oil or water base stain/paint?
You can put oil over water but not water on oil w/out using special primer/sealers.
Pics would help
Knock off all the white and stain new colorWhat are you wanting to do with it?
I actually love polyeurethane, minwax fast drying poly is pretty forgiving, that is what I clear all my stain cabinets with.
I'm a GC/finish carpenter, I do build a lot of aquarium cabs, the poly has held up well for many years now.
Too be honest, no idea what's it's made ofDo you have any idea what kind of wood the stand is made of? If it's not a quality wood, you might be wasting your time stripping it.
Ever use spar poly? Used to use it for beachside railings and it holds up very well to getting wet and uv exposure. Not sure if our lamps are strong enough to do anythin to the stand.
If I had op's stand I would spray several layers of gloss white paint on the inside and on the outside I would do a driftwood technique. It's really easy and comes out like this tabletop:
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It looks like wood that floated in the ocean and then bleached in the sun. I did a shelf that way and in came out awesome
If there's any way to have the table stick out a little more from the tank on one side it is a huuuge convience to have a small shelf to rest your test vials (or beer) while you work on a tank.
takes a little artsy skill to do that
Yeah I hope so, I took off a little more and it looks good just sanded downYeah, that is oak. It would make a for a good looking stand given the right amount of work.
I used the 120 sand paper sheet and took off all the paint and smoothed it out with another 120 block, the wood is extremely smooth.That's actually a nice hidden surprise, usually painted surfaces are made from cheaper materials, so to answer your question, yes I'm sure that can look great when you are finished, just spend the time needed to take it all the way down to clean bare wood, and make sure your final pass is w/ 220 to remove all scratches from previous grits
Hmmmm okay, thanks for the heads upAfter your 120 pass do one w/ 150, then 220, it's really hard to see what scratches are still present until you have clear coated and then it's kinda too late to fix, trust me on this one.
In fact, even after you think you've got all those scratches out just go and hit it again a couple hours and I bet you'll still see you missed a couple.
Don't do any silicone until after you have stained first, silicone repels, and then when you do use paintable caulk w/ silicone additive, goes on white dries clear.
Straight silicone on wood or painted surfaces becomes a mess.
I like to stain, caulk, and then clear coat on top of that after it's good and dry