House was built in the 20's and I've heat gunned the 35 coats of gloss off. Underneath that was some deep brown varnish or stain. Attacking it with stripper and acetone had worked okay for getting that sticky muck off, but it takes literally hours working really hard and makes a huge mess.
Even after doing that, there's a dirty grey / brown residue left on the wood.
I picked up a radial wire brush for my drill and gave it a running over with that, along the grain.
That's cleaned them up really nicely, the grain is looking all firey and alive again. One big problem, the wire is also fairly aggressive and has eaten grooves along the grains. I can't see them from more than two foot away, but I can walking through the jamb, and I can feel the surface is ridged if I touch them - my nail clicks if I run it across the grain direction.
I have a lot of these jambs to strip and need to get them back down to clean wood.
I considered trying one of those nylon wire wheels with abrasive in the strands, hoping that might be less prone to digging in. I was also thinking about using some kind of grain filler to help level off the valleys.
But before trying anything else, I thought I should ask here for some more experienced advice.
I'm sure I could hand sand them, but they feature quite a lot of profiling detail which'll take ages. It's already taking me about five hours to per jamb to get them down to this condition, making hand sanding not much of an appealing option. I have absolutely mountain of jobs to do around my mum's place, so a reasonably efficient method of striking them off to a more level finish would be super!
Are there any epoxy fillers that'll work on deeper grooves? By deep, I can only estimate that they're around 1mm in the worse spots.
I'm hoping to restain them with an alcohol stain in a nice sunset, ambery tone, perhaps a little darker. I want the grain to really come alive.
Thanks for taking the time to read and for any help!
Even after doing that, there's a dirty grey / brown residue left on the wood.
I picked up a radial wire brush for my drill and gave it a running over with that, along the grain.
That's cleaned them up really nicely, the grain is looking all firey and alive again. One big problem, the wire is also fairly aggressive and has eaten grooves along the grains. I can't see them from more than two foot away, but I can walking through the jamb, and I can feel the surface is ridged if I touch them - my nail clicks if I run it across the grain direction.
I have a lot of these jambs to strip and need to get them back down to clean wood.
I considered trying one of those nylon wire wheels with abrasive in the strands, hoping that might be less prone to digging in. I was also thinking about using some kind of grain filler to help level off the valleys.
But before trying anything else, I thought I should ask here for some more experienced advice.
I'm sure I could hand sand them, but they feature quite a lot of profiling detail which'll take ages. It's already taking me about five hours to per jamb to get them down to this condition, making hand sanding not much of an appealing option. I have absolutely mountain of jobs to do around my mum's place, so a reasonably efficient method of striking them off to a more level finish would be super!
Are there any epoxy fillers that'll work on deeper grooves? By deep, I can only estimate that they're around 1mm in the worse spots.
I'm hoping to restain them with an alcohol stain in a nice sunset, ambery tone, perhaps a little darker. I want the grain to really come alive.
Thanks for taking the time to read and for any help!