After you got your riser roughed out and shaped, i'm curious what graduations of sand paper you guys use getting down to the finish product?
I use 36 grit on my edge sander, and spindle sander to get my shape, as well as a 36 grit disc on a die grinder to rough shape my radius shelf. Then i go to 80 grit next on my palm sander to get the scratches out, and then hit it with a sanding sealer. At this stage i'm just looking for wiggles or defects in the shaping process, and getting things looking smooth.
Then i drop down to 120 grit and sand the whole riser again, and hit it with my lacquer sanding sealer again. Now i'm looking for 80 grit sanding marks that i missed. i may do this second process several times before i'm happy, and then start the hand sanding process. I start out with 120... seal it again... then 150.... seal it again, then finish up with 180- 220 grit. By this time i'm mostly just sanding the sealer flush again and filling grain. This has worked well for me for a long time.
My problem is.... Recently i have had a hard time finding 120 grit sanding disks at my local supplier, and had to settle for 150. Going from 80 to 150 is too big of jump and i use a LOT more sand paper doing this....... I am just curious on how you guys are going about it? .... Kirk