Hi,
I'm really getting behind on some refurb work on my Victorian house and want to invest in some tools to give me a bit of a boost
I want to remove the carpets in a few rooms and get back to the bare pine floorboards and apply a nice wax/oil finish. Unfortunately, the floorboards have been painted with a quite horrendous gloss paint... so I have a plan:
Take the boards up, flip them over (removing all nails!) and pass through a portable thicknesser (like a Dewalt 733). This way I don't have to remove the paint, but simply put a smooth finish to the other side of each board.
I will then re-lay the boards and apply a finish. I am hoping that a thicknesser will be able to make the surface of each board nice and smooth so no further sanding is required.
I am also thinking about using a router to put a tongue and groove finish to each board, making for a tighter fit (and I accept I'll be making the boards slightly narrower as a result).
Am I being realistic? Would investing in a combined planer/thicknesser offer any benefit over a simple thicknesser? Thanks.
Alan.
I'm really getting behind on some refurb work on my Victorian house and want to invest in some tools to give me a bit of a boost
I want to remove the carpets in a few rooms and get back to the bare pine floorboards and apply a nice wax/oil finish. Unfortunately, the floorboards have been painted with a quite horrendous gloss paint... so I have a plan:
Take the boards up, flip them over (removing all nails!) and pass through a portable thicknesser (like a Dewalt 733). This way I don't have to remove the paint, but simply put a smooth finish to the other side of each board.
I will then re-lay the boards and apply a finish. I am hoping that a thicknesser will be able to make the surface of each board nice and smooth so no further sanding is required.
I am also thinking about using a router to put a tongue and groove finish to each board, making for a tighter fit (and I accept I'll be making the boards slightly narrower as a result).
Am I being realistic? Would investing in a combined planer/thicknesser offer any benefit over a simple thicknesser? Thanks.
Alan.