Stain Stripping

gordon stelter lclgcnp@yahoo.com
Sun, 21 Aug 2005 10:19:37 -0700 (PDT)


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Sorry, Stefan. He'll never sand to "bare wood" without
going through the veneer, and generally making a mess
out of it. DO NOT NEVER EVER ATTEMPT TO EVEN THE TONE
OF VENEERED WOOD BY SANDING !!!!!!!!!
You will sand through, end up with concavities, etc..

--- Stéphane Collin <collin.s@skynet.be> wrote:

> Hello Terry.
> 
> I would sand to bare wood (carefully) and restain. 
> (But who am I ?)
> 
> Best wishes.
> 
> Stéphane Collin.
>   ----- Original Message ----- 
>   From: Farrell 
>   To: Mailing list for piano refinishers. ;
> pianotech@ptg.org 
>   Sent: Sunday, August 21, 2005 6:39 PM
>   Subject: Stain Stripping
> 
> 
>   I stripped the finish off the inside of the case
> (rim) of a piano I am working on. I used a
> methylene-chloride-free product called Dyna-Strip 2,
> sold by Pianolac. One application of stripper left
> on overnight removed the finish completely - it
> literally fell off - no scraping required at all.
> I'm very happy with that aspect of the results.
> 
>   In some areas, hunks of the stripper slid down the
> face of the rim - it still removed the finish - but
> in those areas, less stain was removed. So now I
> have shadows of light and dark where there was an
> apparent difference in stain removal.
> 
>   What is the best way to address these stain
> shadows?
> 
>   Terry Farrell
> 
> 
> 
> 


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