Summary

Floor sanding is a skill-intensive job — more so than many tradespeople expect. The drum sander is powerful enough to tear through a wooden floor in seconds if held stationary or used at an incorrect angle. Getting the grit progression wrong means either failing to remove deep scratches from coarser grits, or taking off too much material from a floor that only has a limited number of sands left in it.

The key variables are the condition of the existing floor (how much material needs removing), the species of timber (oak sands differently to pine), and the desired finish (oil vs lacquer has significant implications for maintenance and repair).

For a tradesperson, the key commercial differentiators are: proper dust containment (dust-free sanding systems command a premium), correct diagnosis of floor condition before quoting, and understanding how to handle boards that cannot be sanded further.

Key Facts

  • Drum sander direction — Always sand diagonally at 45° for first pass on badly cupped or damaged floors, then sand with the grain for remaining passes. Never stop a running drum on the floor.
  • Edge sander required — Drum sander cannot reach within 80–100mm of walls. Edge sander (rotary disc) is essential for the perimeter strip.
  • Corner scraper — Final 50mm of corners where edge sander cannot reach must be done by hand scraper.
  • Minimum 10 passes per grit — Overlapping each pass by 50% ensures even material removal.
  • Maximum material removal — Most pre-war softwood floors have been sanded multiple times; some have as little as 4–6mm above the tongue groove. Check board thickness (remove a threshold strip to see cross-section) before committing to full sanding.
  • Moisture content — Timber should be ≤10% MC before applying lacquer. Use a moisture meter. Apply oil to slightly moister boards (up to 12%) if necessary.
  • Room temperature — Finish must be applied above 10°C and below 30°C. Cold finish doesn't cure; hot finish may dry too fast.
  • Ventilation — All finishes emit VOCs. Provide through ventilation during application and for the drying period. Oil-based lacquers require particularly good airflow.
  • Sanding solid boards vs engineered — Solid boards can typically be sanded 3–8 times in their life. Engineered boards have a hardwood veneer of typically 3–6mm — check wear layer before sanding.
  • Gap filling — Gaps between boards can be filled with matching timber slivers and adhesive, or with flexible filler tinted to match grain. Do this between grits (after 40 grit rough sand, fill, then continue sanding).

Quick Reference Table

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Grit Sequence Purpose
24–36 grit Heavy removal: existing finish, cupping, major damage. Diagonal pass first if needed.
40–60 grit Main levelling pass. Along the grain. Remove previous grit scratches.
80 grit Intermediate refinement. Always along the grain.
100 grit Final sand before finish. Produces smooth surface.
120 grit (optional) Fine finish pass for oil application. Not always needed for lacquer.
180 grit (between coats) Denib after each coat of lacquer (light pass with orbital or by hand).
Finish Type Coats Required Recoat Wait Drying to Walk Full Cure
Hard wax oil 2–3 8–12 hours 12–24 hours 5–7 days
Danish oil / penetrating oil 3–4 6–8 hours 12 hours 3–5 days
Water-based lacquer 3–4 2–4 hours 4–6 hours 7 days
Oil-based polyurethane 2–3 12–24 hours 24–48 hours 14 days

Detailed Guidance

Equipment Selection

Drum (belt) sanders:

  • Hire from specialists (Bona, Lagler Hummel are standard trade machines)
  • Available with integrated dust extraction — specify this for dust-free system
  • Drum changes: hold machine stationary at 45° above floor, never rest drum on floor when stationary
  • Drum tension: check each paper is properly seated — loose paper tears and damages the drum

Edge sanders:

  • Rotary disc — faster but creates circular scratches on final passes
  • Random orbital — slower but produces cleaner finish (preferred for final passes)
  • Combination: use rotary disc for heavy removal, switch to random orbital for final grit

Hand scrapers:

  • Use for corners and under radiators
  • Cabinet scrapers: 0.5mm thick HSS, burnished to create cutting burr
  • Work with grain, keeping blade at 75–80° to the floor

Grit Progression in Practice

  1. Assess the floor — Check for protruding nails (punch down with nail punch before starting), damaged boards (repair first), existing finish type.
  2. Start coarser than you think — Old lacquer is tough. Attempting to remove thick lacquer with 60 grit creates heat, clogs paper, and damages the drum. Start at 24–36.
  3. Diagonal pass (if needed) — For badly cupped, uneven, or old floors: first pass at 45° to the grain. This cuts across the highest points of each board and levels the floor more efficiently.
  4. Straight passes with grain — All subsequent passes along the grain. Overlap each pass by half the drum width.
  5. Change paper frequently — Dull paper creates heat rather than cutting. Budget for more paper than the hire shop suggests.
  6. Edge sander — Work at same grit sequence as main floor. Blend edge sander passes into main floor passes to avoid visible join marks (this is the hardest skill to master).
  7. Gap fill after 40 grit — Wait for floor to stabilise. Fill gaps with flexible wood filler (Bona Mix and Fill, or slivers). Allow to set fully before continuing.
  8. Final passes — 80 grit, then 100 grit (120 for oil finish). Final pass must be absolutely uniform — any missed area will show through the finish.
  9. Clean the floor — Vacuum twice, then wipe with a lint-free cloth dampened with white spirit (for oil) or just dry (for water-based). No dust before applying finish.

Choosing a Finish

Hard wax oil (recommended for most domestic)

  • Penetrates into the wood rather than forming a film
  • Matte to satin appearance
  • Easy to repair: scuff with fine abrasive, reapply oil to affected area only
  • Maintenance: annual re-oiling extends life significantly
  • Brands: Osmo Polyx-Oil, Bona Hardwax Oil, Rubio Monocoat

Water-based lacquer (polyurethane)

  • Forms a hard surface film
  • High durability and scratch resistance
  • More difficult to repair (full sanding often required for patch repairs)
  • Lower VOC than oil-based types
  • Good in high-traffic commercial contexts

Oil-based polyurethane

  • Very hard, durable surface film
  • High VOC — requires excellent ventilation
  • Amber colour development over time (gives warm tone to light wood but can discolour light wood unacceptably)
  • Long recoat wait (12–24 hours)

Finishing tips:

  • Apply with a flat applicator pad or lambswool applicator — not a brush or roller (both leave lap marks)
  • Work from furthest point from door toward the exit
  • Apply thin coats — thick coats bubble, drip, and take longer to cure
  • Denib between coats: very fine 180 grit or maroon Scotch-Brite, remove all dust before recoating

Engineered Flooring Considerations

Engineered floors have a solid hardwood veneer over a plywood core. The wear layer ranges from 2.5mm (basic) to 6mm+ (premium). Before sanding:

  • Identify the product manufacturer and find technical data for wear layer thickness
  • If wear layer is ≤3mm, a full sand-back is risky; light denib and re-oil is safer
  • Never sand through the veneer — exposed plywood will not finish evenly

Frequently Asked Questions

How many times can a hardwood floor be sanded?

Solid hardwood boards (18–21mm) can typically be sanded 4–8 times over their life, depending on board thickness and how much material is removed each time. The limiting factor is the floor falling below the tongue/groove level. Engineered boards are limited by their veneer thickness (typically 1–2 sands maximum for 3mm veneer).

What causes drum sander marks (chatter marks)?

Chatter marks (regular ridges across the grain) are caused by: a loose or unbalanced drum, incorrect drum tension, worn bearings, or operating the machine too slowly. Check that the paper is correctly seated and tensioned. Always move the machine at a consistent walking pace.

Can I sand parquet floors?

Yes — block parquet and herringbone patterns should be sanded at 45° in both diagonal directions to prevent grain-direction issues. Then sand at 45° the other way. Finish with the primary grain direction if possible (though with herringbone there is no single grain direction). Use lower starting grits (40 grit) to avoid tearing the short-grain end blocks.

How long before the floor can be walked on?

With hard wax oil: light foot traffic after 12–24 hours. Replace furniture after 5–7 days (full cure). With water-based lacquer: light traffic after 4–6 hours, furniture after 7 days. Do not drag furniture — always lift. Felt pads under all legs before furniture goes back.

Regulations & Standards