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#473161 - 12/04/08 01:00 AM
Re: refinishing hardwood floors
[Re: cela]
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Newbie
Registered: 08/06/08
Posts: 34
Loc: Wisconsin
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I had the exact same problem on a hardwood floor. The previous owner just slathered on polyurethane taking virtually no care on how it looked. Some areas were thick, some areas were thin, and there were numerous bubbles all over the place. You could literally peel pieces of this stuff off, and it was a total disaster. Here is what I did.
I got a 6 inch blade steel putty or flat knife, available at any hardware store, and then I got a heat gun. Using the heat gun, I literally melted this gunk , and scraped it off in 6 inch sheets with my putty knife. It was very easy to do. Heat the finish until it just starts to bubble, and then slide your knife beneath it. Slowly move the gun sideways, and follow underneath the gunk with your knife. It works very much like a spatula under a piece of cake. Heat the gunk on top, and slide the knife underneath it.
This may sound like a little bit of work, and it is, but I'll tell you why this is the best way to do it.
When the finish is that thick, if you try and sand it off with a drum sander, the rotation of the drum will begin to heat up the gunk and it will melt onto the sandpaper. It won't sand very well, and you will go bankrupt buying paper. If you use a chemical stripper, it will cost too much to get all the finish off, and it will take days to do this.
Using the heat gun and blade may be a bit more time consuming in some respects, but here are the advantages. Firstly, your initial investment of blade and gun will be about 30 bucks tops. Secondly, doing it this way literally preserves the original wood finish color that was first applied.
Since then, I have done this a couple of more times in very similar situations with super heavy coats of Poly, that was bubbled and flaking, and each time the floor came out in a superior condition that was virtually ready for a new, thinner coat to be applied.
My advice is to pick an afternoon some day, crank up the tunes, and have at it!
I hope that helps a bit. Thanks and Take Care
_________________________
DALE Y THE MAINTENANCE GUY
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#474002 - 12/08/08 06:19 AM
Re: refinishing hardwood floors
[Re: cela]
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Newbie
Registered: 08/06/08
Posts: 34
Loc: Wisconsin
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Hi Cela!
Believe it or not,and only because I am the curious sort that I am, I blasted away with a heat gun on full power, using a strip of that poly stuff that I pulled off. I eventually got it to burst into flames, but there was so much smoke beforehand, that had I not been outside when I did this, I would have been a coughing wreck inhaling the fumes.
I would say that, although feasible under normal use to start the poly on fire with a heat gun, you would generate so much smoke before combustion, that anyone would pull the heat gun away before even the remote possibility of a fire happened.
When you are actually heating up the poly to scrape, it will begin to bubble from the heat, and that is the exact moment to slide the knife beneath it. You'll begin moving the heat gun slowly by then, making more bubbles and sliding the knife. Doing that alone, and there will never be a danger of combustion at all. It may take a few minutes to get the hang of this, but once you do, the poly will peel effortlessly onto the knife.
Needless to say, any time the poly begins to smoke, it's too hot and time to move the heat gun.
Thanks and Take care
_________________________
DALE Y THE MAINTENANCE GUY
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