wet-sanding

English

Verb

wet-sanding

  1. present participle and gerund of wet-sand

Noun

wet-sanding (countable and uncountable, plural wet-sandings)

  1. Alternative form of wet sanding
    1. Sanding with fine-grained sandpaper and lubricant.
      • 1986, Roger H. Siminoff, Constructing a Solid-body Guitar: A Complete Technical Guide, →ISBN, page 51:
        You should anticipate that it will take about four or five applications of three coats each (and subsequent wet-sandings) before the parts are finished.
      • 2005 March, Paul Capello, “Paint Your Case Like a Pro”, in Maximum PC, page 52:
        When your primer coat is dry, it's on to the wet-sanding to get that paint flat and silky smooth.
      • 2007, Steven Dodd Hughes, Double Guns and Custom Gunsmithing, →ISBN, page 86:
        The stock pores should be filled by this 400-grit wet-sanding with just a trace of finish left on the surface. One more wet-sanding with 600-grit paper is done, leaving almost no finish on the surface.
    2. Smoothing damp material with a sponge.
      • 1997, Richard Ziegner, Neil Soderstrom, Walls, Floors & Ceilings, →ISBN, page 47:
        Wet-sanding with a damp sponge works well too.
      • 2004, Stephen Diller, Janelle Diller, Craftsman's Construction Installation Encyclopedia, →ISBN, page 254:
        Wet-sanding is done either with regular sandpaper that's been wetted or with a dampened sanding sponge.
      • 2005, Michael W. Litchfield, Renovation, →ISBN, page 356:
        Using a large sponge to wet-sand drywall joints will definitely reduce dust, but wet-sanding isn't feasible for a project of any size because you must rinse the sponge and change the water continually. Also wet-sanding soaks the paper facing, sometimes dislodges the tape, and tends to round joint compound edges rather than taper them.
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.