Hello,
I have a cabinet door that was slightly damaged in a fire. The door is only
blackened at the bottom and bottom part of the front of the door. The door
is intacted and in great condition considering. What would be the best way
to remove the black char and get it looking like it did before the fire?
Thanks,
Kyle
"Kyle" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Hello,
>
> I have a cabinet door that was slightly damaged in a fire. The door is
> only blackened at the bottom and bottom part of the front of the door.
> The door is intacted and in great condition considering. What would be
> the best way to remove the black char and get it looking like it did
> before the fire?
>
> Thanks,
> Kyle
It has to be planed or scraped away. How depends on how deep it is.
Sanding is probably not going to remove enough material but you can try it
if it seems superficial and only about 1/32" deep. If you have to take
more, a block plane would be a good start.
On Mon, 21 Jan 2008 21:33:53 -0600, "Kyle" <[email protected]> wrote:
>Hello,
>
>I have a cabinet door that was slightly damaged in a fire. The door is only
>blackened at the bottom and bottom part of the front of the door. The door
>is intacted and in great condition considering. What would be the best way
>to remove the black char and get it looking like it did before the fire?
>
>Thanks,
>Kyle
>
Damn, my crystal ball is on the blink..
Help us out here.. is it a painted or natural finish door?
mac
Please remove splinters before emailing
"Edwin Pawlowski" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> "Kyle" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>> Hello,
>>
>> I have a cabinet door that was slightly damaged in a fire. The door is
>> only blackened at the bottom and bottom part of the front of the door.
>> The door is intacted and in great condition considering. What would be
>> the best way to remove the black char and get it looking like it did
>> before the fire?
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Kyle
>
> It has to be planed or scraped away. How depends on how deep it is.
> Sanding is probably not going to remove enough material but you can try it
> if it seems superficial and only about 1/32" deep. If you have to take
> more, a block plane would be a good start.
Some of the door could easily be sanded as it is only a little blackened,
but I will also need a plan. A trip to Lowes will add one to my toolbox.
Is their something that I could use to clean the door? I don't want to use
water, but maybe mineral sprits, rubbing alcohol, or something?
Thanks,