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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#1
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Hi,
I've got some old lino that was bonded to a concrete that I need to remove. Trouble is it's realy stuck. I've tried hot air guns, even hammer and chisel and they hardly make a mark. Has any one got some practicle suggestions for getting the stuff up? H. |
#2
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![]() "oldnews" wrote in message oups.com... Hi, I've got some old lino that was bonded to a concrete that I need to remove. Trouble is it's realy stuck. I've tried hot air guns, even hammer and chisel and they hardly make a mark. Has any one got some practicle suggestions for getting the stuff up? You're looking for a "power scraper" - they look like an electric jackhammer with a large flat flexible plate on the end of it. If you think of SDS + tile removal chisel but on something that stands about 3 or 4 feet tall. Hired one for a day from our local place - not expensive and made short work of lifting a very well stuck vinyl floor without damaging the subfloor. |
#3
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![]() shaun wrote: ....snip... You're looking for a "power scraper" - they look like an electric jackhammer with a large flat flexible plate on the end of it. If you think of SDS + tile removal chisel but on something that stands about 3 or 4 feet tall. Hired one for a day from our local place - not expensive and made short work of lifting a very well stuck vinyl floor without damaging the subfloor. Thanks for the advise.I'd been thinking of using something like hilti rotary/hammer drill with a wide floor lifter type chisel. I'll check with our hire shop. H. |
#4
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oldnews wrote:
shaun wrote: ...snip... You're looking for a "power scraper" - they look like an electric jackhammer with a large flat flexible plate on the end of it. If you think of SDS + tile removal chisel but on something that stands about 3 or 4 feet tall. Hired one for a day from our local place - not expensive and made short work of lifting a very well stuck vinyl floor without damaging the subfloor. Aldi had something similar for a tenner. If they still have them, if it survives the job it would be worth it. Dave |
#5
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This subject header reminded of a fantastic skit by 3 Dead Trolls in a
Baggie - Keep Your Parents of the Internet. The son doesn't want his parents to come across porn on the internet ,but his father says he needs to paint the garage and needs to know if "latex would bondage to stockholm?", so thought he'd do a search for "oh.. I don't know.. latex bondage?". Makes me laugh every time I see it. http://www.deadtroll.com/video/parents.html Enjoy Suzanne. |
#6
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david lang wrote:
oldnews wrote: shaun wrote: ...snip... You're looking for a "power scraper" - they look like an electric jackhammer with a large flat flexible plate on the end of it. If you think of SDS + tile removal chisel but on something that stands about 3 or 4 feet tall. Hired one for a day from our local place - not expensive and made short work of lifting a very well stuck vinyl floor without damaging the subfloor. Aldi had something similar for a tenner. If they still have them, if it survives the job it would be worth it. Power planar properly adjusted might just about work. |
#7
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oldnews wrote:
shaun wrote: ...snip... You're looking for a "power scraper" - they look like an electric jackhammer with a large flat flexible plate on the end of it. If you think of SDS + tile removal chisel but on something that stands about 3 or 4 feet tall. Hired one for a day from our local place - not expensive and made short work of lifting a very well stuck vinyl floor without damaging the subfloor. Thanks for the advise.I'd been thinking of using something like hilti rotary/hammer drill with a wide floor lifter type chisel. I'll check with our hire shop. No problem. We did try with a flat wall tile removal type of chisel + SDS but it didn't even touch it. The trick is in the tool end - if you think of a very strong but thin and flexible piece of sheet metal you're on the right track |
#8
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![]() shaun wrote: oldnews wrote: shaun wrote: ...snip... No problem. We did try with a flat wall tile removal type of chisel + SDS but it didn't even touch it. The trick is in the tool end - if you think of a very strong but thin and flexible piece of sheet metal you're on the right track I checked with our local hire shop - they have a large Bosch hammer drill with an almighty big 6" wide 'board-lifter' type of attachment bolted to the drill shaft. It's not a 'board-lifter' though as it's fairly flexible. They said that because of the width and the flexibility it's not likely to break into the concrete. I'll try it out on Monday and let ya'll know how it went. Cheers, H. |
#9
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had a problem with lino bonded to wooden floorboards, managed to get
them off by using a wallpaper steamer to heat the tiles and glue then used a heavy wallpaper striper to lift them and the glue, if its a amall area it may work on concrete too |
#10
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oldnews wrote:
Hi, I've got some old lino that was bonded to a concrete that I need to remove. Trouble is it's realy stuck. I've tried hot air guns, even hammer and chisel and they hardly make a mark. Now I think of it, I saw some people replacing floor tiles in a B&Q once. They used a flame gun, like you use on weeds and a long handled scraper - two blokes, one flamed, one scraped - they got them off at a great rate of knots. Dave |
#11
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On 14 Oct 2005 16:20:34 -0700, "oldnews"
wrote: Hi, I've got some old lino that was bonded to a concrete that I need to remove. Trouble is it's realy stuck. I've tried hot air guns, even hammer and chisel and they hardly make a mark. Has any one got some practicle suggestions for getting the stuff up? H. I'd use a soldering torch, and burn it off - but only if I had enough venterlation. Rick |
#12
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Check and see if there is a branch of National Floor Preparation
Centres near you and if so hire a Turbo-Stripper machine. On 15 Oct 2005 01:36:30 -0700 "oldnews" wrote: shaun wrote: ...snip... You're looking for a "power scraper" - they look like an electric jackhammer with a large flat flexible plate on the end of it. If you think of SDS + tile removal chisel but on something that stands about 3 or 4 feet tall. Hired one for a day from our local place - not expensive and made short work of lifting a very well stuck vinyl floor without damaging the subfloor. Thanks for the advise.I'd been thinking of using something like hilti rotary/hammer drill with a wide floor lifter type chisel. I'll check with our hire shop. H. - Steve Lowe - E-Mail : - Before Replying Remove .NO.SPAM - UK Resident although my e-mail address is usa.net |
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