I was experimenting with cleaning some of paint brushes loaded with dried
latext paint. One of my experiments consisted of a capful of downy fabric softener and 1/8 cup of tsp mixed into a paint bucket (approx 1 gallon) of scalding hot water. Within 30 seconds - the dried latex paint on the wood handles emulsified and came off in the same consistency that sealers come off my decks when I strip them with caustic strippers. But this was old dried out cured latex house paint! So I thought maybe some of you guys with hot pressure washers could experiment with using really hot water and downstreaming a strong solution of tsp and a surfactant - and then rinsing with really hot water - to see if there is a cheap way of removing latex paint. Now you'll probably raise the grain of the wood - but in this kind of situation, doing a little sanding after probably would beat really expensive causting paint strippers. Just a thought
I was experimenting with cleaning some of paint brushes loaded with dried
latext paint. One of my experiments consisted of a capful of downy fabric softener and 1/8 cup of tsp mixed into a paint bucket (approx 1 gallon) of scalding hot water. Within 30 seconds - the dried latex paint on the wood handles emulsified and came off in the same consistency that sealers come off my decks when I strip them with caustic strippers. But this was old dried out cured latex house paint! So I thought maybe some of you guys with hot pressure washers could experiment with using really hot water and downstreaming a strong solution of tsp and a surfactant - and then rinsing with really hot water - to see if there is a cheap way of removing latex paint. Now you'll probably raise the grain of the wood - but in this kind of situation, doing a little sanding after probably would beat really expensive causting paint strippers. Just a thought
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