Thanks for the offer Chris, Jim Baxter is going to forward it to me. I appreciate it.
I will order from Bullet next time, seems they have just about every grit that Online does with the exception of a couple and they're a bit cheaper too.
Maybe I'm overkill on the grits but I was going to order, 400, 600, 800, 1000, 1200, 1500, 2000, 2500 and 3000.
If this is overkill, let me know what I can get away with and I'll cut the order down.
Thanks for the help.
Terry,
I'd say that the grits you've selected are about right for wet-sanding the finish and you may not use all of them every time you wet-sand.
Dave's grits I'd say are more for sanding bare wood, etc., prior to finishing.
Either way, you've got all the right numbers now.
FWIW, I believe there are several major manufacturers of sand-paper that are located in Canada. I'm sure they'd have 'in country' distributors and they may even ship to Canada.
Just to add a bit, the purpose of progressively finer grits is to remove the sanding marks left from the grit used previously which are now being replaced with even finer sanding marks. Each grit leaves it's own set of marks only they get finer and finer until they can be barely seen by the naked eye.
That's where the buffing & polishing compounds come in. They remove the final sanding marks and give the finish it's brilliant gloss/luster.
As I stated earlier, you may not use every grit every time. It depends on what your finish looks like when you're done shooting. Sometimes I have to start with 400 grit to bring the shaft to the correct diameter.
Then other times, the applied finish is so close to perfect that I can start with 1,000 or 1,200 grit, finishing with 3,000.
3,000 grit is basically polishing paper and not everyone carries it.
The nature of high-solids clear is that you will occasionally have a spot or two of urethane solids that are protruding above the surface. They sand down easily.
The perfect finish, right out of the gun, is hard to come by.