I have been using Tung Oil with a high gloss finish, on some of the fading finish on my interior, it is not uniquely for teak, but can be used for other woods as well. I am not a wood expert, but varnishing it defeats the idea of using an oil. With a tung oil or some other oil finish when the finish starts to fade you can either wax it or clean it and with a minimum of prep simply apply more of the oil finish. I just found the link below, I will try the sandpaper trick sometime soon.Thanks, that helps. I've never worked with teak oil, but it doesn't seem that difficult to work with. Can/should I varnish over it or is that the top coat?
Oh....I get your situation. My nav table had a similar issue. I took the whole thing off (you will have to take the teak plugs out, a small drill bit and a screw will take care of that) took it home stripped it with a stripper,(don't sand it too much its veneer) sanded it, stained it and then put a spar urethane with a high gloss over it (four coats). I chose the polyurethane because it gets a fair amount of abuse. Ill try to send a picture next time i'm at the boat. I am pleased with the results. I am not quite skillful enough to make the kind of repair that Mr. Templeton suggests. I find sanding and varnishing somewhat therapeutic.Ok I got it now. Thanks that's good information. I have a situation where the original finish was varnished over years ago. The finish was damaged on top of the map table by a leaking window port and I was trying to figure out how to repair it. The wood is not damaged just the finish.
take some mayonnaise on a rag and rub it in a straight direction with the grain ..if no joy try toothpaste and do the same thing again you may have to add a little baking soda to the toothpaste and if that doesn't do it the wet a rag with mineral spirits and if that doesn't bring results then it time to refinish itI attached a picture of the damaged area.