I know the Porter Cable 7424 was a sander before detailers discovered it for polishing paint. When I bought my PC about ten years ago I bought it as a polisher not expecting to ever use it for sanding. Well, the time has come to use it for what it was intended. I have a considerable amount of 4 inch clear cedar lap siding that requires a bunch of sanding and cleaning before restaining/resealing. The old stain/seal is a real pain in the butt to remove.
All the information I can find says that a random orbital sander is the best machine for the job. Is the 7424 the sander for this job or should a I look at purchasing another type of sander? I'll be working outside and don't need or want a sander with a dust collector
If I choose to use my 7424, do I use the the present 5 inch hook and loop backing plate (not my good Meguiar's Plate) or is there another type of backing plate that is required?
Using a 5 inch disk on four inch siding may be a problem but it appears that all the orbital sanders use a five inch disk. Any problems with this if I am careful?
I'm sure that I am not the only detail guy who has ended up with a job like this. Any suggestions for my project would be much appreciated. For what it's worth if a building contractor tells you that clear cedar siding is low maintance stuff, he is not telling you the truth. In the past twenty years, I have had to strip and reseal the siding on my house four times. Yuck! But is sure looks good when the job is done.
Tom
All the information I can find says that a random orbital sander is the best machine for the job. Is the 7424 the sander for this job or should a I look at purchasing another type of sander? I'll be working outside and don't need or want a sander with a dust collector
If I choose to use my 7424, do I use the the present 5 inch hook and loop backing plate (not my good Meguiar's Plate) or is there another type of backing plate that is required?
Using a 5 inch disk on four inch siding may be a problem but it appears that all the orbital sanders use a five inch disk. Any problems with this if I am careful?
I'm sure that I am not the only detail guy who has ended up with a job like this. Any suggestions for my project would be much appreciated. For what it's worth if a building contractor tells you that clear cedar siding is low maintance stuff, he is not telling you the truth. In the past twenty years, I have had to strip and reseal the siding on my house four times. Yuck! But is sure looks good when the job is done.
Tom
