How I Strip A Round Table And Keep It Smooth
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- čas přidán 31. 12. 2023
- How I Strip A Round Table And Keep It Smooth
Painting and Decorating
Totally Looped by Audionautix is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 licence. creativecommons.org/licenses/...
Artist: audionautix.com/ - Jak na to + styl
You managed to bring that table to life with a simple and basic tools
Your video came just in time for a door I'm preparing. Top-drawer video as ever!
What a beautiful table soooo worth all the effort to restore gorgeous TFS
Thank you.
Too quality work as usual! Happy new your to you both and god bless.
Thank you.
👍
Thanks
Champion 🏆
thank you.
Very useful this one as it can be daunting to strip a Table like this
Thank you
A brilliant job! Thanks for showing the process. I have a solid oak floor that has some water damage from condensation dripping off a full-length window. Would you recommend using this process. The floor is oiled & varnished. Thank you 👍
Yes this should work you can get wood bleach to remove dark stains. Thanks
A long process but you can't rush a good job.Perfect,thank you.
What mask are you using for this job? I would love a video showing the break down of which masks for which task.
Basicly for dust there are two classes, p2 for nuisance dust for example pulling up old carpets sweeping out the garage or similar and p3 for fine and toxic dusts eg asbestos, Sanding lead paint, cutting mdf, glassfiber or vermiculite.
For vapour protection you then have three categories A, organic vapour, B Inorganic vapour, E, acidic gases and K amonia.
You can get combined protection and this would for instance be labled p3abek.
Obviously the more protection the larger and more expensive the filters, so if you are simply sanding or hanging loft insulation then a p3 filter would be better.
If car paint spraying then a combined vapour filter but if sanding the paint aswell then a combined dust snd vapour filter.
Thank you. The mask is a special one that they recommend to use with expanding foam. Mask needed A1 P2.. thanks
👍👍👍. Thank you
Thank you 👍
great job
Thank you.
Great video
Thank you.
Your welcome thank you @@PaintingandDecorating
Thanks for this, need to do this job myself was unsure about the best way to remove the clear varnish. Very useful video. Happy New Year.
Thank you.
Nice job, when are you going to do the six chairs!
Thanks, chairs are not being done.
With the paint panther stripper there's no need to neutralise with white spirit you can just use water (I did exactly the same as you then read the instructions).
Yes but water and wood is not the best idea, when using oil.
Mirka mess free dust free
Another person who doesn't understand the difference between craftmanship and bodging. Sanding would reduce the value of the piece.
@@toria-j how !
@@TheSmithythe's talking out of his backside. Probably never even seen a mirka let alone used one. Great bit of kit and essential for my business. Paid for itself on the first couple of jobs a decade ago. Never missed a beat since and used daily.
One question, I have some white marks on my table top left by cups of tea etc being left down on it. Would stripping the old varnish remove these marks?
There’s lots of ways just Google it. I used the hot iron method successfully but please search how to do it properly.
Yes stripping the old varnish should remove these. You can get a wood bleach. Thanks
@@PaintingandDecorating Thanks so much
Ryan how can you say he took a shortcut it took him ages 😂😂😂😂
My mirka with a 60 grit pad would whip that off in 10 minutes Followed by an 80 grit then a 120 grit for a smooth finish.. Half hour tops..Move with the times your good at your job but stuck with the old school methods. Work smarter not harder !
Work greener, and don't fall for equipment you use once in a blue moon. Be smart
@@PaintingandDecorating I use my equipment every day for sanding that's why I invested in it. You'll come to realise how quick you can get through jobs with the right equipment. I'm not knocking you by any means..
@@tonyrussell496 👍
And by sanding, you also remove any character that has built up during the years, which is sacrilege if you value wood. That isn't smart, that's foolish in not understanding the difference.
@toria-j on the contrary, I work with furniture regularly and I wouldn't be without my Mirka. Less dust, less harmful voc's and a damn sight quicker than any other method. If done correctly sanding can enhance the grain of any timber but you have to have the patience to start at a 60 or 80 net and go through the grits up to a 240 or even a 320. There's nothing wrong with either method however, whichever one the works best for the person paid to do the job. To say sanding devalues a piece is simply not true. The French polisher on salvage hunters uses his sander regularly. 😅