process and method
Sanding – The Traditional Refinishing Method
Mechanically grinding a wood floor to bare wood using progressively finer grits – the only method for deep repair or stain color changes.
Published
The sanding process
A full sand-and-refinish happens in stages:
- Rough cut (36 or 40 grit) – drum sander removes the old finish and any surface damage.
- Medium grit (60 grit) – smooths scratches from the rough cut.
- Fine grit (80 or 100 grit) – final smoothing so the floor accepts stain evenly.
- Edging – hand-edger reaches areas the drum sander can’t, using the same grit progression.
- Corners + tight spots – hand scrapers and detail sanders.
- Vacuum + tack – HEPA vacuum, then wipe with tack cloth to remove remaining dust before finish.
- Water pop (optional) – lightly dampen the floor to open grain for stain penetration.
- Stain (optional) – apply stain with lambswool applicator, wipe off excess, dry 24 hours.
- Sealer or first poly coat – dries 4–12 hours.
- Screen between coats – 220 grit screen to knock down raised grain.
- Additional poly coats (2–3 total) – each dries 4–24 hours depending on formulation.
Total timeline: 4–6 days with water-based poly, 5–7 days with oil-based.
Why sanding still matters
ReCoating solves the “my finish is worn” problem. But if the wood itself is damaged, sanding may be part of the assessment:
- Gouges from furniture drag, high heels, or pet nails that expose bare wood
- Water damage or cupping from moisture
- Stain color that you want to change
Pet stains and UV fade need an in-person assessment because sanding alone may not remove them. Some floors need repair, replacement, or another method before any finish system makes sense.
The wear-layer budget
Every sanding uses up part of your floor’s wear layer (the thickness of wood above the tongue-and-groove joinery). Solid 3/4-inch hardwood has roughly 3/8 of an inch of usable wear layer. Each full sand removes around 1/16 of an inch, meaning you get 4–6 total sandings over the floor’s life.
ReCoating uses zero wear-layer budget. If your floor can qualify for a ReCoat, always ReCoat instead of sanding – you’re preserving future sanding options.
What “dustless sanding” means
Dust-containment sanding uses shrouded sanders connected to HEPA vacuums, plastic sheeting at room entries, and negative-air machines to keep dust out of HVAC. It’s 95–99% better than uncontained sanding. It’s still not truly dust-free, which matters for homes with asthma, allergies, or valuable electronics. For truly zero-dust results, use ReCoating with chemical abrasion instead of any sanding.