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Big Al
 
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Default Stripping wood cabinets

Trying to gather ideas about stripping some kitchen cabinets. The doors and
drawer fronts are made of 3/4" plywood. They have many coats of paint I'd
like to remove. What's the best stripper? At what point do you stop
stripping and start sanding? If I can get them clean I'm going to stain
them.

What is an older adhesive used to hold 4 inch tile to a wall? It's brown and
hard and I need to remove it too. Tried a scraper but it will take a year
that way. What is the beast way to get it off?

Al


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buffalobill
 
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Default Stripping wood cabinets

this job will never end.
we have done it well after exhausting a crew's elbow grease and
stripper, and we have done it poorly when our helpers ren out of
energy. if you do it well you will have passed the incredible patience
test.
if you do it poorly you will curse the day you bought stripper and
steel wool and sanding supplies and exhaust fans and another shop-vac
and 4 coats of urethane and now the countertop looks like hell and the
new cabinets/countertops/sinks will really look attractive at home
depot.

that adhesive is from 1955 and it doen't like to let go.
look at http://www.liquidnails.com/home.do

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SQLit
 
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Default Stripping wood cabinets


"Big Al" wrote in message
...
Trying to gather ideas about stripping some kitchen cabinets. The doors

and
drawer fronts are made of 3/4" plywood. They have many coats of paint I'd
like to remove. What's the best stripper? At what point do you stop
stripping and start sanding? If I can get them clean I'm going to stain
them.

What is an older adhesive used to hold 4 inch tile to a wall? It's brown

and
hard and I need to remove it too. Tried a scraper but it will take a year
that way. What is the beast way to get it off?

Al


I considered this once. I bought a can of stripper chose the smallest door
in the kitchen and outside I went.
After using a quart of stripper~$10 and a couple of days, I had ~half the
door half assed done. There was no way that I was going to tackle the
vertical styles on the cabinets with stripper.


I used a saw and crowbar and removed the cabinets and replaced them.


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Norminn
 
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Default Stripping wood cabinets

Big Al wrote:
Trying to gather ideas about stripping some kitchen cabinets. The doors and
drawer fronts are made of 3/4" plywood. They have many coats of paint I'd
like to remove. What's the best stripper? At what point do you stop
stripping and start sanding? If I can get them clean I'm going to stain
them.

What is an older adhesive used to hold 4 inch tile to a wall? It's brown and
hard and I need to remove it too. Tried a scraper but it will take a year
that way. What is the beast way to get it off?

Al


With "many coats" of paint, it may cost more to strip than to get
replacement doors. I doubt that I would bother stripping plywood. How
many doors and drawers do you have? What is cabinet face made of?
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Edwin Pawlowski
 
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Default Stripping wood cabinets


"Big Al" wrote in message
...
Trying to gather ideas about stripping some kitchen cabinets. The doors
and
drawer fronts are made of 3/4" plywood. They have many coats of paint I'd
like to remove. What's the best stripper? At what point do you stop
stripping and start sanding? If I can get them clean I'm going to stain
them.


I have limited experience, but that past year stripped paint of a maple
chest. I hesitated figuring it would be a real PITA, but is worked out
fairly simple. I bought a gallon of paint remover from Wal Mart. I forget
the brand. Applied a coat of it on a side. They gave you a sprayer, but I
had better results with a brush. Waited 10 minutes. With a putty knife, I
just lightly scraped and all the finish came off. Rinsed with water, let it
dry, sanded with 150 grit, then 400 grit and done.

A few spots had to be touched up. Overall, it came out excellent and it is
now refinished and looks as good as it did 50+ years ago when it was in my
bedroom as a kid.

Plywood may not turn out as well, especially the edges. It may be easier
and look better to replace the drawer fronts.




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Default Stripping wood cabinets

BEFORE starting a stripping project look at lowes stock cabinets, I
bought some Kraft Maid they were low cost and looked great. Remember
stripping cabinets is a lot of work, will likely require some new
hardware, plywood drawer fronts may not stain nicely, and during all
that time the kitchen will be disrupted.

now buy some stripper and try on a couple spots, use with good
ventilation for the types that require it, and decide for yourself if
its worth the work.

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John50049
 
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Default Stripping wood cabinets


Big Al wrote:
Trying to gather ideas about stripping some kitchen cabinets. The doors and
drawer fronts are made of 3/4" plywood. They have many coats of paint I'd
like to remove. What's the best stripper? At what point do you stop
stripping and start sanding? If I can get them clean I'm going to stain
them.

What is an older adhesive used to hold 4 inch tile to a wall? It's brown and
hard and I need to remove it too. Tried a scraper but it will take a year
that way. What is the beast way to get it off?

Al


I have been refinishing furniture for about 30 years and have tried
alot of ways. To remove paint I use a heat gun and putty knife. Just
experiment to learn how much heat and how fast to move. Once you start
heating and the paint start to melt just slide the putty knife along at
the speed the paint will melt. Just don't stop in a spot very long or
it will burn. I have done this many times on furniture, wood work
cabinets, etc. and it work great. After taking most the paint off with
heat then I use Parks liquid strip and steel wool to wash it off then
sand it. Hope this helps

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John50049
 
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Default Stripping wood cabinets


Big Al wrote:
Trying to gather ideas about stripping some kitchen cabinets. The doors and
drawer fronts are made of 3/4" plywood. They have many coats of paint I'd
like to remove. What's the best stripper? At what point do you stop
stripping and start sanding? If I can get them clean I'm going to stain
them.

What is an older adhesive used to hold 4 inch tile to a wall? It's brown and
hard and I need to remove it too. Tried a scraper but it will take a year
that way. What is the beast way to get it off?

Al


I have been refinishing furniture for about 30 years and have tried
alot of ways. To remove paint I use a heat gun and putty knife. Just
experiment to learn how much heat and how fast to move. Once you start
heating and the paint start to melt just slide the putty knife along at
the speed the paint will melt. Just don't stop in a spot very long or
it will burn. I have done this many times on furniture, wood work
cabinets, etc. and it work great. After taking most the paint off with
heat then I use Parks liquid strip and steel wool to wash it off then
sand it. Hope this helps

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Big Al
 
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Default Stripping wood cabinets


"John50049" wrote in message
ps.com...

Big Al wrote:
Trying to gather ideas about stripping some kitchen cabinets. The doors

and
drawer fronts are made of 3/4" plywood. They have many coats of paint

I'd
like to remove. What's the best stripper? At what point do you stop
stripping and start sanding? If I can get them clean I'm going to stain
them.

What is an older adhesive used to hold 4 inch tile to a wall? It's brown

and
hard and I need to remove it too. Tried a scraper but it will take a

year
that way. What is the beast way to get it off?

Al


I have been refinishing furniture for about 30 years and have tried
alot of ways. To remove paint I use a heat gun and putty knife. Just
experiment to learn how much heat and how fast to move. Once you start
heating and the paint start to melt just slide the putty knife along at
the speed the paint will melt. Just don't stop in a spot very long or
it will burn. I have done this many times on furniture, wood work
cabinets, etc. and it work great. After taking most the paint off with
heat then I use Parks liquid strip and steel wool to wash it off then
sand it. Hope this helps


So far I stripped one with Jasco Premium paint stripper and one with another
brand. The Jasco worked better and cost the same at Home Depot. I'm going to
try something else and make a decision on what to do. I have 10 doors and
some drawers to do. Was going to sand and repair the cabinets and just
veneer them. Is that a good idea? The doors and drawer fronts are 3/4"
plywood but they would be hard to replace. There is no center board between
them and they fit perfect and have beveled edges and sit half way into the
cabinet opening. Besides that they are all different sizes

Al


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