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Suggestions?
I had a Trex deck for some years and had problems with deterioration of the material and it was quite hot under foot. I currently have a redwood deck which is nice but requires maintenance as you know. You might consider one of the Brazilian hardwoods such as ipe'. I saw a boardwalk made of it in NJ and it looked very nice and I'm sure will last a long time. I think it's a bit harder to work with but you can get the details by looking online. If I were redoing my deck I would chose that.
No need to give her a vacation, JohnR, she's a traveling consultant who only comes home every few weeks. And she wouldn't fall for it.I'm all about structural integrity and low maintenance and she's all about Sheng Fooey/appearance. My plan is to alter the substructure in one weekend, redo the decking in the evenings, and THEN do the railing. I forgot about the composite material being hot underfoot.....
George, cost is an issue of course, and while I don't want a deck that looks better than the house, I don't want to do it on the cheap either.If I do the deck boards now, and the railing bit-by-bit, I may be able to handle the cost. I might even put a sloping cover underneath to keep the patio below dry. When hail storms threaten that's where we put one of the cars.I am intrigued by that heavy roll-on material designed to cover treated wood. I also have a power washer.
By heavy roll on material...do you mean the stuff that's supposed to make old decks new?If so, stay the hell away from it. I know two people who tried it and it was a nightmare. Tons of similar horror stories online.BTW, if the current deck is fine structurally and size wise, a really good power wash and restaining will make it look and feel like new. Before we sold my last house, the realtor and my friends said we needed to tear the deck down and replace it, or it would hurt our asking price. After powerwashing and restaining, it looked brand new and the eventual buyers loved how it looked.George
I'm a firm believer in buying quality instead of redoing something every few years.
FWIW I have a outside bench I redid in ipe about 10 years ago. It gets full sun a couple hours a day. Within a year it had faded from the original color. Zero maintenance over those 10 years. It still looks like it did 9 years ago. Solid and no splinters. I'm a firm believer in buying quality instead of redoing something every few years.