Water-Base Laquer

Erwinspiano@AOL.COM Erwinspiano@AOL.COM
Tue, 4 Jun 2002 00:34:08 EDT


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In a message dated 6/3/2002 7:16:59 PM Pacific Standard Time, 
gnewell@ameritech.net writes:


> Subj:Re: Water-Base Laquer 
> Date:6/3/2002 7:16:59 PM Pacific Standard Time
> From:<A HREF="mailto:gnewell@ameritech.net">gnewell@ameritech.net</A>
> Reply-to:<A HREF="mailto:pianotech@ptg.org">pianotech@ptg.org</A>
> To:<A HREF="mailto:pianotech@ptg.org">pianotech@ptg.org</A>
> Sent from the Internet 
> 
>       Gregg ,Terry

  Thanks for the replys. This seems to echo a concensus. For this process I 
think I'll stick with the nasty stuff as you all are.  We strip outside when 
possible with plenty of air and protection.
   Dale Erwin

> 
> Dale,
>         I tried the water based strippers a few times and was disappointed 
> with the results every time. I remember hearing / being told that it was a 
> one coat application and even though you had to wait a lengthy amount of 
> time before you took it off, it would all come off in one coat. Well ... 
> not so in my experience. I had tried some of it on a main lid and it was so 
> soggy by the end of the wait time that the edge veneer came off with the 
> varnish. I was more than slightly disappointed. I've never had that happen 
> with regular stripper. I was all for it if it would truly remove everything 
> in one coat but it did not. The regular Toluene stripper did a better job 
> and at a much faster rate. My 2 cents!
> 
> Greg
> 
> 


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