Friggin awesome bud! This weekend I'm working on building a nice decorative electrical panel door. And around the border I want nice stained wood without screws showing. Thank you so very much for sharing your talents. You're obviously a good person. 👍🏻
@@HowToHomeDIY you are so welcome! And thank you very much, I need all the luck I can get. I'm a bit new working with wood. I'm great at building guns.....not so much with wood projects....haha! Take care bud!
Whats up with all you Nitpickers?😂 Look. This is a great idea for those who don't have too many screws to cover. Simple.🤷♀️ I have a book ledge that I'm trying to do just that for. Perfect for my project, thanks for the video!
I'm looking all over YT and nobody can help me. I'm trying to dismantle a built in cupboard wall, and I need to get to the screws underneath the woodfiller on the back walls. How is that done? Any help or ideas about getting to the screws would be a godsend.
You are absolutely right. You would not want to do it for all screws. Would just be for places that you don’t want to see the screws and a pocket screw doesn’t make sense to use or can’t be. Thank you for the feedback!
You could do it but it will definitely damage the wood. If you aren't worried about that, you can try to locate where the screw is and chisel the cover open, remove enough of the wood glue on the screw head, and try to get a screw gun with whatever bit that matches the screw head on it to remove the screws. Unfortunately going in reverse will not be as easy as the initial process.
@@HowToHomeDIY Thanks for the response. I'm tearing out some fitted shelves to the wall and don't need the wood. I'll give your suggestions a try. Thanks a lot buddy! 😊
@@neiljohnson5351 You're welcome! In that case, with a little work you should be able to knock it out! If you find a better way I would love to hear about it. Good luck on the project and thank you for watching!
@@banjowoodsman7675 just a case of wire brushing and scratching out the plaster and debris out of the screw heads. Impact driver helped a lot too once the screw heads were all cleaned. Shelves gone, wall plastered, repainted and life is good! 😊
Yeah if you have a big project with a lot of screws, there are other forms of joinery that can be hidden, but if its just a few on a top surface for instance then it is doable. Just depends on the project. Thanks for the feedback Michelle!
Friggin awesome bud! This weekend I'm working on building a nice decorative electrical panel door. And around the border I want nice stained wood without screws showing. Thank you so very much for sharing your talents. You're obviously a good person. 👍🏻
Thank you very much for the kind words Brian! Good luck on the project. Sounds like a nice addition!
@@HowToHomeDIY you are so welcome! And thank you very much, I need all the luck I can get. I'm a bit new working with wood. I'm great at building guns.....not so much with wood projects....haha! Take care bud!
Absolutely genius! Thank you so much
Whats up with all you Nitpickers?😂 Look. This is a great idea for those who don't have too many screws to cover. Simple.🤷♀️ I have a book ledge that I'm trying to do just that for. Perfect for my project, thanks for the video!
Hello, awsome work. Can you feel it when you brush your finger off of it?
Awesome idea
Thanks a lot!
I'm looking all over YT and nobody can help me. I'm trying to dismantle a built in cupboard wall, and I need to get to the screws underneath the woodfiller on the back walls. How is that done? Any help or ideas about getting to the screws would be a godsend.
Have you tried a magnet to locate the screw head?
BOOKMARK 👍👍👍👍
0:16 Tools
0:50 Chisel flap method
Nice video
Thanks!
Nice work.
Thank you!
Brilliant!! I will try this
Hey Gia, thank you! Have fun!
nice! although it is a bit impractical for all screws. Great idea to hide only those on the visual of the person.
You are absolutely right. You would not want to do it for all screws. Would just be for places that you don’t want to see the screws and a pocket screw doesn’t make sense to use or can’t be. Thank you for the feedback!
Blow out the shavings first for a more flush fit.
I need the reverse option. That is, trying to remove the plaster to remove screws.
You could do it but it will definitely damage the wood. If you aren't worried about that, you can try to locate where the screw is and chisel the cover open, remove enough of the wood glue on the screw head, and try to get a screw gun with whatever bit that matches the screw head on it to remove the screws. Unfortunately going in reverse will not be as easy as the initial process.
@@HowToHomeDIY Thanks for the response. I'm tearing out some fitted shelves to the wall and don't need the wood. I'll give your suggestions a try. Thanks a lot buddy! 😊
@@neiljohnson5351 You're welcome! In that case, with a little work you should be able to knock it out! If you find a better way I would love to hear about it. Good luck on the project and thank you for watching!
@@neiljohnson5351 Neil not sure I am completely following your situation, however once you locate the screw could you use a plug cutter on the wood?
@@banjowoodsman7675 just a case of wire brushing and scratching out the plaster and debris out of the screw heads. Impact driver helped a lot too once the screw heads were all cleaned. Shelves gone, wall plastered, repainted and life is good! 😊
That’s crafty but it’s a bit too much
Yeah if you have a big project with a lot of screws, there are other forms of joinery that can be hidden, but if its just a few on a top surface for instance then it is doable. Just depends on the project. Thanks for the feedback Michelle!
This time I will do it manually with the help of Woodglut designs.
It doesn’t work when you have walls in needs of filler
Not practical if you need several holes.
That’s why there are different applications for every job to fit the job or desire.