Thanks Thanks:  0
Likes Likes:  0
Needs Pictures Needs Pictures:  0
Picture(s) thanks Picture(s) thanks:  0
Results 1 to 4 of 4

Thread: ready strip

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Location
    western australia
    Posts
    10
    Post Thanks / Like

    Default ready strip

    hi i am new here so i hope i am posting this in the right section -
    apologies if not
    has anyone come across this product ?

    http://www.readystripoutlet.com/site/586339/page/236249

    i have seen it advertised in the uk & you can buy it over here , but i do not know anyone who has used it
    i would like to strip down some painted doors which we believe are made from oregan (sp)

    any help appreciated

    pootle26

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Location
    kiama
    Posts
    390
    Post Thanks / Like

    Default

    Hi Pootle26,

    Using stripper on timber can be a messy and frustrating business. A house painter would avoid doing so, stripper will soak into the timber and can be hard to get out which means when you try to paint anything onto the wood it gets stripped ( doesn't dry).

    Try burning the paint off, if you can get a porta gas torch or an old blow lamp just warm up the paint film. It will probably be enamel so will blister up, the heat won't hurt the timber, it will act as an insulater and unless you give it a real big serve with heat you won't char it. I stripped a weather board house years ago by burning off. cost only two bottles of gas less than a 4 litre of stripper and the house would have taken a few hundred litres to do the whole place.

    Do it outside or away from any combustables - blister the paint, scrape it with a scraper and with a bit of practice you will have clean timber ready for a light sand, no stripper to neutralize with water, no raised grain no problems getting the stripper out of the grain.

    Use the scraper in the hand you write with or you will find yourself tending to want to help scrape with the torch and you may burn your hand. The paint usually turns to ash and rarely keeps burning but every paint is different so you won't know till you try.

    Stripper leaves you with a soggy wet lump of paint which you need to dump somewhere safely, the dry burnt paint residue you can easily sweep up into a bin.

    Hope that is of some use to you.

    PS this process is for wood only, its useless on metal unless you heat the metal red hot as it absorbs the heat - as in burning a car to to the ground, stripper is the preferred method for metal

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jun 2004
    Location
    Bunbury W.A.
    Age
    57
    Posts
    294
    Post Thanks / Like

    Default

    I will lay even money that most doors in your place are jarrah veneer that have been painted.........what am i bid?
    if you always do as you have always done, you will always get what you have always got

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Location
    western australia
    Posts
    10
    Post Thanks / Like

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by maglite
    I will lay even money that most doors in your place are jarrah veneer that have been painted.........what am i bid?
    is that bad?

    new to oz so have no idea of wood used - going on the say so of a builder :eek:
    scary i know!! (tee hee)



    pootle26

Similar Threads

  1. Ready to assemble?
    By Sir Stinkalot in forum HAVE YOUR SAY
    Replies: 5
    Last Post: 7th May 2005, 07:29 PM

Tags for this Thread

Bookmarks

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •