The Woodpecker EP 313 - How to Strip chairs with baking soda

I had six chairs to strip the varnish off. They were full of nooks and crannies so we used a soda blaster for those hard to reach places. In this video you will see how we managed to do this.
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Alain Vaillancourt 2024
Music:
Whiskey on the Mississippi - Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
creativecommons.org/licenses/b...

Пікірлер: 29

  • @Saavik256
    @Saavik2563 ай бұрын

    It's so lovely seeing you and Renee working together. :)

  • @LgosseuxDbois-TheWoodpecker

    @LgosseuxDbois-TheWoodpecker

    3 ай бұрын

    I love it when she's able to help me, but some time two in the shop is too much. But I have a big projet that I'm postponing for several months now, on this project I will need her help. So I'm expecting to be with her in the shop next week 😁

  • @nadavhoresh
    @nadavhoresh3 ай бұрын

    This is a crazy amount of dedication :)

  • @LgosseuxDbois-TheWoodpecker

    @LgosseuxDbois-TheWoodpecker

    3 ай бұрын

    Thank you. Yes this took WAY longer that I was anticipating

  • @TheMrWoodsman
    @TheMrWoodsman3 ай бұрын

    I hope you were paid well for this amount of work.

  • @LgosseuxDbois-TheWoodpecker

    @LgosseuxDbois-TheWoodpecker

    3 ай бұрын

    It was for a member of the family... After we told them how long everything took, they game us $300 more, we were pretty happy. It's why I often say how long I worked on something, this can guide someone else to figure the work involved.

  • @cheyenne5804
    @cheyenne58043 ай бұрын

    you both should be up for sainthood. I've used a sandblaster when frosting glass and doing light stripping and know that it is a major task. My hat is off to y'all for doing this. Don't think I would have undertaken it if it were me great job!

  • @LgosseuxDbois-TheWoodpecker

    @LgosseuxDbois-TheWoodpecker

    3 ай бұрын

    Thank you very much. I had no clue it was such a job, but the end product was very satisfying.

  • @briantaylor9266
    @briantaylor92663 ай бұрын

    You've added another skill to your experience. Hindsight is 20/20, so I wonder if you would do it again, or would you have at least waited until you could do it outside? Or would you consider using a chemical stripper instead? Or even use a scraper in those areas you couldn't sand? But thanks for posting this. Based on what you showed us, I'm pretty sure I would think hard about it before I invested in the equipment. I love learning from other people's experience!

  • @elsiethoma1360

    @elsiethoma1360

    3 ай бұрын

    For me, I would have really waited until I could do it outside. I hate cleaning when I could have avoided it. Spring is so close.

  • @LgosseuxDbois-TheWoodpecker

    @LgosseuxDbois-TheWoodpecker

    3 ай бұрын

    Thank you. I wanted to share my experience, so like you said other people can make their own decision. I won't do this inside anymore, but I will probably do it again in warmer weather. All those nooks ans carnies were a nightmare, the soda was able to remove every little corner without any problem. But like I showed, it not for every type of wood, I saw after, that more ceramic nozzle were available, with different hole sizes, maybe by switching the nozzle it can do a different job? I don't know? I'm not sure a chemical stripper would have worked as good, but one thing is sure it would have took WAY longer, this was still pretty fast, But I'm glad Renée helped me this was a WAY bigger job that what I anticipated....

  • @tokkarijuha
    @tokkarijuha3 ай бұрын

    I'll think i'll use varnish stripper gel and a cood old scraper for that next summer project of renewing kitchen kabinet doors.

  • @LgosseuxDbois-TheWoodpecker

    @LgosseuxDbois-TheWoodpecker

    3 ай бұрын

    It would be less dusty that's for sure. If those chairs didn't had that much nooks and crannies I would have done this diferently

  • @tokkarijuha

    @tokkarijuha

    3 ай бұрын

    Yes those type of chairs are definitely a lot of work no matter how you go about it. Congratulations finishing those.

  • @jappyled1394
    @jappyled13943 ай бұрын

    Aaaargh!!!! I would have preferred to see Renée diving around some reef in the Bahamas😵

  • @LgosseuxDbois-TheWoodpecker

    @LgosseuxDbois-TheWoodpecker

    3 ай бұрын

    Lucky for me she's happy with way less than being in the Bahamas 😉

  • @peter_kelly
    @peter_kelly3 ай бұрын

    Tabernac! That made a mess.

  • @LgosseuxDbois-TheWoodpecker

    @LgosseuxDbois-TheWoodpecker

    3 ай бұрын

    A real one, but at least it made the sanding in hard to reach places easy, but the mess was incredible, never again inside.

  • @robertkuivjogi7013
    @robertkuivjogi70133 ай бұрын

    Thank you that you invited Renee too into your new project. You should build a special room for finishing and stripping with a compressor because you will spoil your machines with this dust. Every woodworker has the special room for this if he can afford it and you can.

  • @LgosseuxDbois-TheWoodpecker

    @LgosseuxDbois-TheWoodpecker

    3 ай бұрын

    Renée is a big part of all my adventures, she's so amazing. I will never do that inside again, and by showing it to all my viewers, they will make their own decision if they want to do that inside their shop. I wish I had a special place for finishing, but my shop is not big enough. About 20% is used for the garden shed, but I still store some clamps and plywood there. This part is so full that we have to get the lawn tractor out each time we need to get something out...

  • @Dingbat217
    @Dingbat2173 ай бұрын

    What's the benefit of using a soda stripper versus a sand blaster with fine media in it? Wouldn't the sand last a lot longer before it breaks down so a lot less dust in the process? If you re-use the soda for long enough it will just keep breaking down into finer and finer sizes and eventually you won't be able to filter it, and surely the finer it becomes the less 'aggressive' it becomes? Did you notice any degradation in the stripping performance from fresh versus re-used soda? Thanks for sharing your experience of stripping those chairs, if I ever get asked to do this I now know how to respond! 😛

  • @LgosseuxDbois-TheWoodpecker

    @LgosseuxDbois-TheWoodpecker

    3 ай бұрын

    I really don't know? all the people who I talked to said that using sand is way to agressive on wood, so I didn't even try it. Reusing the soda was a real money saver, even if it was breaking down. A bag is 50lbs ($80 Canadian) and the container contain 15lbs, that was emptied in 20 minutes. I estimated that Renée blasted for 20 to 25 hours, this would have cost an arm if we had only used fresh soda... The stripping performance was not noticeable, but the refilling time was. Fresh soda escape from the funnel like inside an hourglass but the fine one always got stuck in the small hole... I wanted to share my experience so all my subscribers can see how it's done and make their own decision if it's worth it for them.

  • @user-eb5im6xv3w

    @user-eb5im6xv3w

    3 ай бұрын

    When I was a mechanic, we used a sand blaster for cleaning heavily grunged parts. We had to be very careful that we didn't score into the metal. What Alain said. Sand would eat your wood up, and I suspect that it would erode the soft fibers more easily leaving you with more sanding to do

  • @28Cryptic743
    @28Cryptic7433 ай бұрын

    did the reused soda still sand the surface as well as new soda or did you then have t blast it more, I'm assuming that it got progressively harder to blast

  • @LgosseuxDbois-TheWoodpecker

    @LgosseuxDbois-TheWoodpecker

    3 ай бұрын

    Renée didn't see any noticeable difference in the efficacy of the soda. But like I said it became harder and harder to refill the tank with fine soda, I wish it would have a bigger refill hole, but it's a really un-expensive soda blaster so maybe a high end one has a bigger refill hole?

  • @davidhaywood8029
    @davidhaywood80293 ай бұрын

    Oh my goodness, Alain! That looks like horror film -- worse than The Exorcist. Someone needs to write a letter to the Pope, and have you and Renée awarded sainthoods. A marriage surviving this level of trauma is a much more impressive miracle than any number of weeping effigies, etc. (And with a more useful result).

  • @LgosseuxDbois-TheWoodpecker

    @LgosseuxDbois-TheWoodpecker

    3 ай бұрын

    LOL, you are in a real good mood. But jokes apart, Renée is fantastic, with her this took half the time and I was super happy about it, I really was not expecting this to took so long.

  • @davidhaywood8029

    @davidhaywood8029

    3 ай бұрын

    @@LgosseuxDbois-TheWoodpecker She certainly is! By the way, this was actually a really helpful video for me since I have to strip some paint/rust from some (very) old tractor panels -- as part of a restoration. I was looking at soda blasting, but had never considered how much eye protection you'd also need. So I think it might be the dreaded paint stripper for me again (one of my most hated chemicals). In fact I hate it so much that I'd probably pay someone else to do -- except that I don't trust anyone else to be sufficiently careful! Sigh.

  • @LgosseuxDbois-TheWoodpecker

    @LgosseuxDbois-TheWoodpecker

    3 ай бұрын

    Yes you need a lot of protection, especially the eyes. If it's done outside, the fine dust that fly everywhere is not a so big issue. But I understand, it always seem that no one beside us can make the meticulous job that we want, so like you I do my own repairs/restauration.