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bob January 3rd 06 10:12 PM

Wallpaper removal
 
I have recently been doing some wallpaper stripping from a wall in my
home and I came across a valuable idea. When I dampened the wallpaper
with a sponge and let the water soak in, the paper seemed to peel of
rather easily. Maybe others have found that using water is a good idea?
I was thinking that maybe I could patent the idea of using a bucket and
sponge- any thoughts on that? A friend of mine had the answer of not
having to strip wallpaper anymore - he emulsions his walls instead
using an emulsion pad but that tends to leave streaks on his walls. I
suggested to him that he use an emulsion brush which I feel is a good
idea. The reason water makes wallpaper easily removable is that
wallpaper paste is mixed with water so therefore the water returns the
dried paste to its original paste form. Wallpaper paste can be quite
tricky to mix. I tend to mix it with a little water first to ensure a
good smootheness. If it is lumpy the paste will leave bumps beneath the
paper which is an unsightly sight if one stands at 45 degrees to the
wall. Therefore i suggest mixing it thoroughly before use. Bob.


The3rd Earl Of Derby January 3rd 06 10:18 PM

Wallpaper removal
 
bob wrote:
I have recently been doing some wallpaper stripping from a wall in my
home and I came across a valuable idea. When I dampened the wallpaper
with a sponge and let the water soak in, the paper seemed to peel of
rather easily.


Oh! gawd now- he tells me after all these years.
--
Sir Benjamin Middlethwaite



EricP January 3rd 06 10:35 PM

Wallpaper removal
 
On 3 Jan 2006 14:12:01 -0800, "bob" wrote:

I have recently been doing some wallpaper stripping from a wall in my
home and I came across a valuable idea. When I dampened the wallpaper
with a sponge and let the water soak in, the paper seemed to peel of
rather easily. Maybe others have found that using water is a good idea?



I am indebted to you forever for this tip sir!


Set Square January 3rd 06 10:38 PM

Wallpaper removal
 
In an earlier contribution to this discussion,
bob wrote:

I have recently been doing some wallpaper stripping from a wall in my
home and I came across a valuable idea. When I dampened the wallpaper
with a sponge and let the water soak in, the paper seemed to peel of
rather easily. Maybe others have found that using water is a good
idea? I was thinking that maybe I could patent the idea of using a
bucket and sponge- any thoughts on that?


I think you're a bit late! Devices like http://tinyurl.com/bpjln - which
use steam rather than water - have been around since Adam was a lad!
--
Cheers,
Set Square
______
Please reply to newsgroup. Reply address is invalid.



david lang January 3rd 06 10:40 PM

Wallpaper removal
 
bob wrote:
I was thinking that maybe I could patent the idea of using a
bucket and sponge- any thoughts on that?


Wow! This time next year, you could be
a...............................................











.............................. complete ****.

Dave



bob January 3rd 06 10:41 PM

Wallpaper removal
 
Oh! Back to the drawing board then! Bob.


[email protected] January 3rd 06 10:50 PM

Wallpaper removal
 
I was thinking that maybe I could patent the idea of using a
bucket and sponge- any thoughts on that?


The Romans used a system invented by Urinus Extractimus.

I had no idea that wallpaper paste was mixed using water. I thought it
was ready made by Shiphams of Chichester.

Regards Pastor O'Walls


bob January 3rd 06 10:55 PM

Wallpaper removal
 
Urinus Extractimus - I like it! Bob


Grumpy owd man January 3rd 06 11:12 PM

Wallpaper removal
 
I found that if you hold the wallpaper up with drawing pins,it
COMPLETELY eliminates any future 'water / sponge / brush / scraper'
unpleasantness. As an added advantage you can make little pictures out
of the drawing pin heads. I have a wall made completely of drawing
pins.


--
Posted via Mailgate.ORG Server - http://www.Mailgate.ORG

bob January 3rd 06 11:15 PM

Wallpaper removal
 
Thats Kool. Bob


Davao January 4th 06 12:11 AM

Wallpaper removal
 

"bob" wrote in message
oups.com...
I have recently been doing some wallpaper stripping from a wall in my
home and I came across a valuable idea. When I dampened the wallpaper
with a sponge and let the water soak in, the paper seemed to peel of
rather easily. Maybe others have found that using water is a good idea?
I was thinking that maybe I could patent the idea of using a bucket and
sponge- any thoughts on that? A friend of mine had the answer of not
having to strip wallpaper anymore - he emulsions his walls instead
using an emulsion pad but that tends to leave streaks on his walls. I
suggested to him that he use an emulsion brush which I feel is a good
idea. The reason water makes wallpaper easily removable is that
wallpaper paste is mixed with water so therefore the water returns the
dried paste to its original paste form. Wallpaper paste can be quite
tricky to mix. I tend to mix it with a little water first to ensure a
good smootheness. If it is lumpy the paste will leave bumps beneath the
paper which is an unsightly sight if one stands at 45 degrees to the
wall. Therefore i suggest mixing it thoroughly before use. Bob.


Looks like Bob has brought to an end these regular discussions on the
merits of sds drills. Water! Blimey! Don't half feel stupid now, ah do!

Arthur



fred January 4th 06 12:13 AM

Wallpaper removal
 

"bob" wrote in message
ups.com...
Thats Kool. Bob

Hey Bob, any special tips for removing woodchip paper, without resorting to
hammer and chisel?
TIA, you are obviously an expert and I bow to your brilliance.
Better yet, maybe you could come round and assess the situation?



John Rumm January 4th 06 02:25 AM

Wallpaper removal
 
fred wrote:

Hey Bob, any special tips for removing woodchip paper, without resorting to
hammer and chisel?


One of these actually makes it quite easy:

http://www.screwfix.com/app/sfd/cat/...16530&ts=41185

TIA, you are obviously an expert and I bow to your brilliance.
Better yet, maybe you could come round and assess the situation?


better still do it for you ;-)


--
Cheers,

John.

/================================================== ===============\
| Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk |
|-----------------------------------------------------------------|
| John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk |
\================================================= ================/

sPoNiX January 4th 06 03:10 PM

Wallpaper removal
 
On 3 Jan 2006 14:12:01 -0800, "bob" wrote:

I was thinking that maybe I could patent the idea of using a bucket and
sponge- any thoughts on that?


You have made the fatal mistake of revealing your idea before
patenting it!

Sponix dashes off to patent office

Bwahahahahahaah!

sponix

bob January 4th 06 03:18 PM

Wallpaper removal
 
Oh darn it! bob


bob January 4th 06 04:17 PM

Wallpaper removal
 

fred wrote:
Hey Bob, any special tips for removing woodchip paper, without resorting to
hammer and chisel?


Woodchip wallpaper comes off very easily with a sponge and a bucket of
water but the water must be wet enough to soak in for at least an hour.
Failing that, just sit there and question yourself as to why you hung
woodchip wallpaper in the first place. bob


Ophelia January 4th 06 04:21 PM

Wallpaper removal
 

"bob" wrote in message
oups.com...

fred wrote:
Hey Bob, any special tips for removing woodchip paper, without
resorting to
hammer and chisel?


Woodchip wallpaper comes off very easily with a sponge and a bucket of
water but the water must be wet enough to soak in for at least an
hour.


... and what if your water isn't wet enough........................?




bob January 4th 06 04:28 PM

Wallpaper removal
 
then make it wetter... I say, must I tell you how to do everything!
lol bob


Davao January 4th 06 06:43 PM

Wallpaper removal
 

"Ophelia" wrote in message
. uk...

"bob" wrote in message
oups.com...

fred wrote:
Hey Bob, any special tips for removing woodchip paper, without resorting
to
hammer and chisel?


Woodchip wallpaper comes off very easily with a sponge and a bucket of
water but the water must be wet enough to soak in for at least an hour.


.. and what if your water isn't wet enough........................?


Theres a hole in your bucket, dear Ophelia.

Arthur



raden January 4th 06 11:00 PM

Wallpaper removal
 
In message .com, bob
writes

fred wrote:
Hey Bob, any special tips for removing woodchip paper, without resorting to
hammer and chisel?


Woodchip wallpaper comes off very easily with a sponge and a bucket of
water but the water must be wet enough to soak in for at least an hour.


Sorry, you can't use water - it's just been patented

Failing that, just sit there and question yourself as to why you hung
woodchip wallpaper in the first place. bob


--
geoff

fred January 5th 06 12:48 AM

Wallpaper removal
 

"bob" wrote in message
oups.com...

fred wrote:
Hey Bob, any special tips for removing woodchip paper, without resorting
to
hammer and chisel?


snip
Failing that, just sit there and question yourself as to why you hung
woodchip wallpaper in the first place. bob


That's all very well, but it doesn't remove the wallpaper.
Also, Bob, remember those balls of lime (aka whitewash)? Often applied to
ceilings?
How do you attach wallpaper (sorry, ceiling paper) to that?
PS, do Screwfix supply your wet water?
PPS, how many beans make 5?



david lang January 5th 06 02:09 AM

Wallpaper removal
 
bob wrote:
then make it wetter... I say, must I tell you how to do everything!


Water isn't actually that wet - which is why we use
detergents..................

Dave



bob January 5th 06 01:32 PM

Wallpaper removal
 
Of course water is wet Dave, it's very wet, when I have a bath I get
out wet. When it rains I get puddles outside - unless of course I get a
special type of rain. bob


Andy Luckman (AJL Electronics) January 7th 06 11:29 AM

Wallpaper removal
 
In article .com, bob
wrote:

the water must be wet enough to soak in for at least an hour.


I have heard of dry ice and dry wine, but never dry water?

--
AJL

John Rumm January 7th 06 01:55 PM

Wallpaper removal
 
Andy Luckman (AJL Electronics) wrote:

I have heard of dry ice and dry wine, but never dry water?


Powdered water, they invented it for the space program. It never really
caught on as they could never work out what to add when you mix it ;-)

--
Cheers,

John.

/================================================== ===============\
| Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk |
|-----------------------------------------------------------------|
| John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk |
\================================================= ================/

soup January 7th 06 04:26 PM

Wallpaper removal
 
John Rumm wrote:
Powdered water, they invented it for the space program. It never
really caught on as they could never work out what to add when you
mix it ;-)


Dehydrated water is taken as a joke , but wouldn't the salts and
minerals to add to distilled water be dehydrated water? Can envisage
lots of processes where distilled (pure) water is obtained, drinking
this and only this would it eventually make you unhealthy (IANAD)? So
the salts and minerals could be added to it to make it the same as
drinking water. I realise it is a special case and it has a lot more
salts and minerals than normal but is something like Dioralyte not
dehydrated water.





--
This post contains no hidden meanings, no implications and certainly no
hidden agendas so it should be taken at face value. The wrong words
may be used this is due to my limitations with the English language .





Richard A Downing January 7th 06 05:28 PM

Wallpaper removal
 
On 3 Jan 2006 14:12:01 -0800
"bob" wrote:

I have recently been doing some wallpaper stripping from a wall in my
home and I came across a valuable idea. When I dampened the wallpaper
with a sponge and let the water soak in, the paper seemed to peel of
rather easily.


Isn't easier to remove the plaster from behind the wallpaper, then roll
the wallpaper up for reuse and put fresh plaster on the walls? It
remove the need to use all that polyfiller on the cracks too.

raden January 7th 06 08:44 PM

Wallpaper removal
 
In message , John
Rumm writes
Andy Luckman (AJL Electronics) wrote:

I have heard of dry ice and dry wine, but never dry water?


Powdered water, they invented it for the space program.


No they didn't

I distinctly remember in TV2000 that the daleks invented it to enable
them to take over the universe

I also distinctly remember wondering what daleks actually needed water
for

It never really caught on as they could never work out what to add when
you mix it ;-)


--
geoff

david lang January 8th 06 12:34 PM

Wallpaper removal
 
bob wrote:
Of course water is wet Dave, it's very wet, when I have a bath I get
out wet. When it rains I get puddles outside - unless of course I get
a special type of rain. bob


Surely the wetness of water depends on it's moisture content?

Dave



Ophelia January 8th 06 01:02 PM

Wallpaper removal
 

"david lang" wrote in message
.uk...
bob wrote:
Of course water is wet Dave, it's very wet, when I have a bath I get
out wet. When it rains I get puddles outside - unless of course I get
a special type of rain. bob


Surely the wetness of water depends on it's moisture content?


You could carry it in a smaller container if you dehydrated it first.



bob January 8th 06 04:22 PM

Wallpaper removal
 


You could carry it in a smaller container if you dehydrated it first.


I am working on using dehydrated water for wallpaper removal, it will
make the bucket lighter. bob


bob January 8th 06 04:24 PM

Wallpaper removal
 


You could carry it in a smaller container if you dehydrated it first.


I am working on using dehydrated water for wallpaper removal, it will
make the bucket lighter. bob


bob January 8th 06 04:24 PM

Wallpaper removal
 


You could carry it in a smaller container if you dehydrated it first.


I am working on using dehydrated water for wallpaper removal, it will
make the bucket lighter. bob


bob January 8th 06 04:24 PM

Wallpaper removal
 


You could carry it in a smaller container if you dehydrated it first.


I am working on using dehydrated water for wallpaper removal, it will
make the bucket lighter. bob


bob January 8th 06 04:24 PM

Wallpaper removal
 


You could carry it in a smaller container if you dehydrated it first.


I am working on using dehydrated water for wallpaper removal, it will
make the bucket lighter. bob


Ophelia January 9th 06 10:12 AM

Wallpaper removal
 

"bob" wrote in message
oups.com...


You could carry it in a smaller container if you dehydrated it first.


I am working on using dehydrated water for wallpaper removal, it will
make the bucket lighter. bob


It would be lighter still if you didn't use 5 buckets



raden January 9th 06 08:46 PM

Wallpaper removal
 
In message .com, bob
writes


You could carry it in a smaller container if you dehydrated it first.


I am working on using dehydrated water for wallpaper removal, it will
make the bucket lighter. bob

So, how many buckets do you need ?

--
geoff

bob January 10th 06 03:37 PM

Wallpaper removal
 
1 bucket of dehydrated water should suffice. The bucket needs to have a
hole in the bottom so any build up of condensation can drip away. bob


david lang January 10th 06 10:52 PM

Wallpaper removal
 
bob wrote:
1 bucket of dehydrated water should suffice. The bucket needs to have
a hole in the bottom so any build up of condensation can drip away.


Not going to work Bob. Water is H2O. The O bit, being round, will fall
through the hole. This will leave you with a bucket full of H2, which will
float upwards, so you won't be able to reach it.

I do wish you would think about these things in a logical manner.

Dave



John Rumm January 11th 06 02:23 AM

Wallpaper removal
 
david lang wrote:

Not going to work Bob. Water is H2O. The O bit, being round, will fall
through the hole. This will leave you with a bucket full of H2, which will
float upwards, so you won't be able to reach it.


That would be ideal for stripping ceiling paper though!


--
Cheers,

John.

/================================================== ===============\
| Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk |
|-----------------------------------------------------------------|
| John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk |
\================================================= ================/


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