Water stains to lacquer finish

Jan 7, 2014
443
Beneteau 45F5 51551 Port Jefferson
My mast boot was leaking while on the hard and with the boat tilted back to the stern a bit, the water apparently ran down the bulkhead to the saloon discoloring the wood stain and/or finish. This is on a '93 Beneteau and the finish looks to be cherry with a lacquer finish. I'm afraid to try sanding, staining and refinishing for fear of making it worse than it already is. Any suggestions?
 

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Jan 19, 2010
12,553
Hobie 16 & Rhodes 22 Skeeter Charleston
Lacquer would be an unusual choice for a boat finish. It is most likely a varnish or polyurethane of some kind. The solution usually involves light sanding and revarnishing. Beneteau should be able to identify the finish they put on the bulkhead.
:plus:
Hand sand and go slow. If it is a veneer, you don’t want to cut through.
 
Jun 21, 2004
2,782
Beneteau 343 Slidell, LA
Beneteau recommends Mohawk pre catalyzed lacquer; however, I have had unsatisfactory results with lacquer and prefer to use Minwax helmsman spray polyurethane. I have been told that some paint stores that have the Cabot line of stains will custom mix stain to match your application or you can self mix minwax stains to your satisfaction. As @rgranger mentioned, you are going to have to sand lightly; however, use extreme caution to avoid sanding thru the veneer. See the attached refinishing guide from Beneteau. Wood Repair Year Methodology.pdf
 

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Last edited:
Apr 11, 2020
782
MacGregor 26s Scott's Landing, Grapevine TX
I have a little experience with sanding and restaining from a few pieces I have done in our home. My initial instinct was to go light and wipe on more stain if I needed to darken it, but I learned that stain also tends to seal, so I wasn't able to get the wood to absorb much more stain after applying the first coat of. I would suggest finding the same or similar wood and testing different shades until you get the results you are looking for. You would need to sand down to bare wood first. And yes, be careful lest you sand through the veneer.

I hired a professional painter to darken some cabinets in a home I was renovating, and he mixed stain into urethane varnish and painted it over the honey oak finish after light sanding (not sanding back to bare wood). The results were surprisingly good. The nice thing about this approach is that it doesn't risk sanding through the veneer, and if you don't get the varnish/stain mix right, you can just wipe it off and try again. Once you are satisfied with the results, seal it with a spray-on varnish.

Resign yourself to the notion that you will never be able to do an undetectable repair. I would say you should not have too much trouble making it look better than it does now.
 
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RitSim

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Jan 29, 2018
454
Beneteau 411 Branford
I replaced my water damaged salon seating risers. I did find that cherry was the color but had trouble getting the wood to accept the stain. In the end, I tinted some Helmsman polyurethane with the cherry and the match is real close. My work was not adjacent to other stained wood so matching was less of an issue for me.
 
Jan 7, 2014
443
Beneteau 45F5 51551 Port Jefferson
Thanks for the replies, getting the color right will be the hard part. the color in photos can can be deceiving depending on the light. I like the idea of staining the polyurethane or varnish. I think I have some wine racks and closet pieces that are original to the boat that I can experiment on.
 

arf145

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Nov 4, 2010
495
Beneteau 331 Deale, MD
I don't know about back in 93, but I believe that stain colored varnish (or polyurethane) is in fact how Beneteau finishes interiors.