I suppose everybody's mileage differs, but as an experienced professional level wooden yacht topside painter, I might consider 220 grit sufficient for coating with sprayed basecoat, after which I'd sand to 320 at least before thinking of laying on a gloss finish coat, and that's at 1:1 scale, i.e. "life size." At a scale of 1:48, using coating material properly thinned "to scale," i.e., as close to that as possible, 220 grit is going to be way too coarse for a scale finish.
We will never achieve a "to scale" finish, nor do we need to. We are using OUR eyes to view the finish, not the "scale" eyes of some 1.5" tall sailor looking at the finish from a distance of less than a centimeter.
This isn't to say that coatings can't be applied thickly enough over a surface sanded with 220 grit to provide a smooth surface once the coating levels, but that can only be accomplished at the cost of a lot of obliterated detail.
Again, /I/ am talking about natural and stained wood finishes, NOT painted finishes. Regardless of grit, detail is not obliterated on wood finishes.
The nautical term for "a wood surface left natural or stained, rather than painted" is "finished bright." Bright model surfaces, or painted surfaces, for that matter, are taken down to fine grits, ultimately 300 or 400 grit, or even finer, in order to develop a sufficiently smooth surface to accept a fine finish. 220 grit is far too coarse to provide the degree of smoothness sufficient to provide a flawless finish with the multiple thin layers of thinned paint or varnish that produce a fine finish.
Again, a flawless finish is not necessary or desirable, to me. A flawless finish, even with matt finishes, ends up way to glossy and artificial on models, IMHO.
Arguably, on a model aspiring to meet the most widely recognized standards of high quality, ("A high-quality scale ship model provides a compelling impression of an actual vessel within the constraints of historical accuracy.") emphasized grain ("figuring") in bright finishes, whether stained or not, is to be avoided as it is grossly out of scale.
100% agree.
The fact that a smooth wood surface "doesn't accept stains well," is just "the wood telling you something." on a work of fine art (if the modeler cares,) the wood's own natural finish, modestly enhanced with a thin coating of shellac or neutral oil, has far greater integrity that "a pound of pancake makeup on a tart."
Coloring of bright wood is best accomplished with wood dyes which penetrate the wood while not leaving any coating buildup on the surface itself.
Dyes are certainly an excellent way of coloring, although most modelers don't use them. I use often penetrating stains, such as Watco Danish Oil finishes, in Natural, Medium and Dark Walnut. If you take pieces of cherry or pear, which is mostly what I use, and finish them with sandpaper up to 400 or so, it becomes /very/ difficult to get the color I want. And too many coats produces gloss I don't want. For large areas, sure I'll put a better finish on it, but again, it can become too glossy. I'm sure you'll agree that really smooth wood becomes glossy even without any finish, and that's not what I'm looking for. Glossy varnish or paint on a scale model makes the model look like a toy, rather than a scale representation of the original. Anyhow, that's just the way I like my "tarts", pancake makeup or not.
BTW, I have tried dyes on my last model, bought every color in the world, loved the way they went on bare wood. Then had all kinds of problems with assemblies of different colors, where glues and dyes would run into other areas, making a mess. So I'll use dyes on furniture, which I do make, but not on models.
"Less is more." The coatings applied to a miniature piece that has any amount of detail should be to scale, which, such being in most every instance impossible, means "as thin as possible." Any buildup of paints, varnishes, and other coatings on the surface of a scale model miniature will obscure the fine detail that is essential to the "compelling impression of an actual vessel" the scale ship modeler strives to achieve. Looking at the large percentage of scale ship models posted online, particularly those by beginning kit builders, the single most damaging shortcoming detrimental to their providing a "compelling impression of an actual vessel" is their lack of finish quality.
I certainly agree buildup of paint has to be avoided. Varnish matters less, as it won't obscure detail IMHO. But I apply a minimum of finish too, just to enough to get the color and sheen I'm after. And again, IMHO, a smooth shiny wood finish on an 18th century warship is incorrect and is much more detrimental to providing a
"compelling impression of an actual vessel".
Again, just my opinion and my comments refer only to wood on a model imitating wood on the subject being modeled.