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References: [ +subject:/^(?:^\s*(re|sv|fwd|fw)[\[\]\d]*[:>-]+\s*)*Paint\s+removal\,\s+wood\s+house\s+trim\s*$/: 9 ]

Total 9 documents matching your query.

1. Paint removal, wood house trim (score: 1)
Author: Mark J Bradakis <mjb@autox.team.net>
Date: Mon, 10 Sep 2001 14:35:17 -0600 (MDT)
As winter approaches here in the northern hemisphere, I'm considering doing some of the outside house trim painting I've been putting off for too long. A fair bit of it is flaking and peeling, so I d
/html/shop-talk/2001-09/msg00101.html (7,851 bytes)

2. RE: Paint removal, wood house trim (score: 1)
Author: "Landaiche Kenneth (NET-BBS/Petaluma)" <ken.landaiche@nokia.com>
Date: Mon, 10 Sep 2001 16:07:01 -0500
The pressure washer is a good start. Add a bleach feed if you suffer from mildew, then rinse. Then sand down whatever is left, prime, paint, sit back and sip a cold one! Good luck. Painting is one of
/html/shop-talk/2001-09/msg00102.html (8,415 bytes)

3. Re: Paint removal, wood house trim (score: 1)
Author: Brian Kennedy <kennedybc@mediaone.net>
Date: Mon, 10 Sep 2001 18:31:13 +0100
The guy that looks after our rental property says he doesn't do pressure wash any more before painting on wood. He thinks the water soaks into the wood too much and the paint peels prematurely. He ju
/html/shop-talk/2001-09/msg00105.html (9,219 bytes)

4. Re: Paint removal, wood house trim (score: 1)
Author: "John T. Blair" <jblair@exis.net>
Date: Mon, 10 Sep 2001 18:20:57 -0400
Mark, My vote is for the heat gun or propain tourch. John John T. Blair WA4OHZ email: jblair@exis.net Va. Beach, Va Phone: (757) 495-8229 48 TR1800 48 #4 Midget 65 Morgan 4/4 Series V 75 Bricklin SV1
/html/shop-talk/2001-09/msg00106.html (8,318 bytes)

5. RE: Paint removal, wood house trim (score: 1)
Author: jmark.vanscoter@amd.com
Date: Mon, 10 Sep 2001 19:11:34 -0500
Contrary to what was said earlier, I used a pressure washer on my father's house. It worked fine, removed most of the bad paint, and the new paint is still on the house 4 years later. The key is, obv
/html/shop-talk/2001-09/msg00107.html (8,508 bytes)

6. Re: Paint removal, wood house trim (score: 1)
Author: "Phil Ethier" <pethier@isd.net>
Date: Mon, 10 Sep 2001 20:43:00 -0500
Bob whats-his-name, the old-house guru from Rock Island, Illinois, says that pressure-washing cedar clapboards knocks all the "pith" out of the wood, and therefore destroys its natural decay-resistan
/html/shop-talk/2001-09/msg00109.html (8,686 bytes)

7. Re: Paint removal, wood house trim (score: 1)
Author: Richard Welty <rwelty@suespammers.org>
Date: Mon, 10 Sep 2001 22:01:48 -0400
i wasn't quite paying attention this thread; i may have similar issues. our house is about 10 years old, with cedar siding. some years after the previous idiot, er, owner, built it, he decided to pai
/html/shop-talk/2001-09/msg00110.html (8,631 bytes)

8. Re: Paint removal, wood house trim (score: 1)
Author: "Elton Clark" <lotus.tony@airmail.net>
Date: Tue, 11 Sep 2001 00:58:20 -0500
doing long. wood ?? Reciprocating sander, rotary wire brush and nine kinds of scraping. The scary part is that the REMAINING paint is pretty likely to start the peeling and flaking very soon. There's
/html/shop-talk/2001-09/msg00111.html (8,596 bytes)

9. Re: Paint removal, wood house trim (score: 1)
Author: Brian Reynolds <reynolds@ll.mit.edu>
Date: Tue, 11 Sep 2001 10:48:09 -0400
If you have a *LOT* of paint to strip, check out the : Porter-Cable Paint Remover #PO7403 between $180 - $200 6" Tungsten Carbide disc About $8 each. I have been TOTALLY stripping my house (1 side pe
/html/shop-talk/2001-09/msg00117.html (8,488 bytes)


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