I have a few planes to restore. One of the main problems is removing the old Japanning so I can restore the bed of the plane.
What ways to remove the old Japanning have worked well and relatively pain free for you?
Thanks and regards,
Stew
I have a few planes to restore. One of the main problems is removing the old Japanning so I can restore the bed of the plane.
What ways to remove the old Japanning have worked well and relatively pain free for you?
Thanks and regards,
Stew
The one time I did it, I think I just used wire brushes, small scrapers and picks - maybe some sandpaper or scotch brite.
~ Do not seek to follow in the footsteps of the men of old; seek what they sought.
I cheated I used the bead blaster at work.
Get the can of paint stripper at one of the borgs that just says "STRIPPER" on it, let it soak on the bed for (whatever the can says) and then wipe it off with paper towels and rinse. The japanning just comes off completely.
Wear gloves when you do it, the stripper will burn your skin. A can will do several planes, and it's not expensive.
Thanks for the comments guys, and I am hoping for more ideas as well. There has to be lots of ways that work well, but I don't have much experience with any of them a cleaning off the Japanning, so can use all the help I can get.
That said:
Bill, we have bead blasters as work. How easily and well does it take the Japanning off, and does it cause the metal to be frosted?
David, the term "borgs" has shown up several times on the forum, but I have never seen or heard of the term other than here. Perhaps it is because I am in the panhandle of Texas, and it is not a common term here. At any rate, what kind of place is a "borg?" We have lumber yards, hardware stores, auto parts stores, and places like Walmart.
Thanks and regards,
Stew
Last edited by Stew Denton; 10-30-2014 at 9:07 PM.
Borg typically means Home Depot or Lowes.
~ Do not seek to follow in the footsteps of the men of old; seek what they sought.
Yeah this. But it might show up at lumber yards or wal mart.
looks like this.
http://www.homedepot.com/p/Klean-Str...SR72/100135467
No environmentally friendly stuff, get the real deal for this case. You'll be shocked at how the japanning just rinses off.
A bead blaster does a fine job without the harsh messy chemicals. It leaves a clean surface that's ready for refinishing.
Stew:
I have successfully used a bead blaster. The one I have access to uses a really round sand.
Something with a sharper aggregate would give a real frosted surface.
Good luck.
I used lacquer thinner on the one plane I stripped. It worked well, but the plane did not have a lot of heavy japanning. It was a #7 Union by Stanley.
Some techniques I use http://www.timetestedtools.com/how-t...storation.html
Ditto to paint stripper. Use an environment-friendly version.
Regards from Perth
Derek