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JFife

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Posts posted by JFife


  1. sup Dan,

    ...Are you asking a specific person?? ..My opinion, not as easy to apply as soon allude. It is "easy" as in "difficult to make look bad", but to make it "durable", you have to apply very specifically, i.e. correct moisture, coats done in a properly-spaced way, etc. Done right, very durable, looks nice, and the easiest of all to maintain. Just don't buy into the "can be applied by a Monkey" philosophy.


  2. Jarrod--

    ...Don't you share an office/secretary?? That seems like a real good situation. I am lucky, most of my jobs last 2-4 weeks, and I leave my equipment at the job the whole time. When done, I move it to next job. If not for this, I'd have to have commercial space. Really glad to be holding off on that for now, I like keeping things CHEAP!!:)


  3. Good work Ken. At the higher monthly gross, was your net in-line with what it was last year, etc.??

    ...I think Jarrod and I crossed up on gross vs. net. My gross is way up, but net is not at what it should be due, to the costs of the ability to grow. At this point, I could stop growth and net would go way up, but at this point I'd rather grow.....I don't require a lot of personal money. My growth plans involve one more year and at that point, I'll start pushing to get the Net higher. Thoughts??


  4. LOL, I was going to say the same thing as Enviro. From what I've heard, Barstow provides a lot of career opps for a well-oiled crank operation:) I hear you can smell the battery acid by just driving through town:) Screw pwashing, become a DENTIST!! Just bustin' chops Anthony:) Had a neighbor from Barstow. I am in same boat as you....mortgage around $600 for a house twice as big as I need. City traffic makes me homicidal.


  5. TimberTek is one of these new oil/water emulsion products. Waterborne. I'd agree that this is an acrylic coating, or if not, is going to be as difficult as one. I spoke with them about this product about six years ago, and they said that one of the greatest benefits of it is that is dries very hard. Really, I doubt F18 will strip this at any strength, and even if it does, the results will probably be blotchy. Naoh products have limited and inconsistant results on Waterbase/waterborne/acrylic products.

    TimberTek makes a stripper of their own....have you called them and asked what strips their product?? I'll send you a PM and suggest something else that may work for this particular product (won't work on other acrylics, don't ask:))


  6. What's up Aaron? Hope all is well in Nashville--

    ...What is the current moisture level? I'd give it maybe one or two months, bleach wash/neutr. and stain. Probably need a light coat after first year. If they wait until yr. two, then you have to do a detail wash, which would take significantly longer (cost more). Option: 1: Rinse now and stain, then rinse next year and stain. Option 2: Wait yr, detail wash and stain. Sell them on option 1.


  7. Christian--

    I was too tired to post on this yesterday, but you nailed it......the skill on this isn't that tough, it the logistical issues. Here is what I'd do:

    1) Remove at night

    2) Put on sawhorses

    3) Apply Removall310

    4) Stand guard at door for an hour

    5) Powerwash off using airless paint sprayer

    6) You and helper re-install door

    7) Come back couple days

    8) Sponge-sand surfaces, palm sand smooth bottoms/edges/tops

    9) Brush on Sikkens cetol, attention to bottoms/edges

    10) Have fans on to speed drying of 1st coat

    11) 1st coat dries, re-install doors

    12) Next night, 2nd coat (don't need to remove doors)

    13) Next night, 3rd coat (don't need to remove doors)

    Hope this helps...charge large, lots of legwork on this service. To speed it up/make easier, you could do a penetrating oil stain like RS, but won't have gloss look.

    BTW, I'd say the door is Mahog from appearance. Definitely not oak.

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