It seems like the painting industry adopted a pressure wash and spray methodology because it saves time. If you tried to blast off that paint I'm sure some would come off but if you just gave it a glancing blow then paint over it, the customer would never know. In other words scraping is usually necessary and you can't just pressure wash and go. I like to use a 3" "chisel" style putty knife. Paint comes off like skin from a bad sunburn. Then sand the area back and feather with 80, prime then paint 2 coats. You are right, 99% of people would never notice a good job from a half assed job. I'm also a fan of peel bond type primers for the south side of the house, door frames, wood deck rails etc. Good video.
Bought a house from the 1920s, it had so many layers of old paint there are places where it was 3-4 mm thick. We opted to simply re-side based on the amount of labor that would have gone into painting. We had quotes to paint that were essentially the same as re-siding.
A vinyl sided home from the 1920's is just sad. If the cost was the same why not make the home look amazing with a proper high quality paint job? Now you have a plastic coated house ugh.
I was given a 1/2 inch scraper at 7 and told to scrape an entire house this this 60x60 feet. Top to bottom, middle of summer, and no shade. I will never forgive my parent for this when they knew it could be done faster with other methods. They put siding on after I was taken away by DCPS.
Oh, you’re the only one that said how those bubbles form! Thank you very much. I always assumed water was in them, but you explained it clearly thank you.
I painted a house this summer that had the same problem. I popped the blisters, and primed it. The owner wanted a dark green, and guess what? It blistered again. We have seen this happen to a few house's in the 40+ years I have been painting. Darker colors over lighter colors seems to be part of the problem. Other painters say you should never use paint, and only use stain. That seems great except you have to stain it more often then paint. My old friend took all of his siding off and turned it over, and then stained it. Now you can sand all the old stuff off, or use paint remover. That takes a lot of time, and cost a lot too! If it was my house that blistered I would do the best I could, and call it good!
@@NoTengoIdeaGuey while thats true and not saying lead paint isnt still out there on old homes most jobs have been painted in the last 40 years so a very less common worry
Thanks! When I bought my house the paint looked great within 6 months it was bubbling and peeling. Now I am redoing and my handyman is doing a shit job saying primer will make everything adhere. Ugh, guess this 68 yr. old woman will have to do it herself. I want the job to last and not look like a hack job.
If it is cedar clapboard, paint just will not last, especially modern environmentally safe paint. It will start pealing after 3 years. I am working on my house, and having a problem reaching the top to scrap, and it really isn't all that high. Hence I am looking at YT lol
I did that to the back wall of my house last Spring/Summer season. The set up was exactly as shown in the video. Same type of tongue and groove boards. What a nightmare. You do have to remove it all, especially the paint from under those lips where the tongue meets the grooves. What a hassle. If you don't remove all the old paint, it keeps popping up, especially, as in my case, it takes you more than a day to scrap it. What happens is that overnight heat or humidity ends up getting underneath the bit you just scraped, and if you left paint behind, that paint will end up lifting and start pealing. I was scrapping for days. Take it all down to plain wood, or you are just wasting time and money. No other way around it. If you "gauge" the wood, get a good wood-filler such, fill in the spots you need to fill in, wait a day, sand it. Be prepared to scrap paint until the day you are ready to paint. Most likely, if you didn't scrape it all, you will still have stuff to scrape as you are painting it. Don't believe me? Try it!
Yeah I think I’m going to just put on vinyl siding considering the amount of bs that has to be done to get the paint ready. I’ve tried scraping and I’ve tried painting over but it seems no matter what like you said if you don’t get every bit off then it just chips off again.
What about using a pressure washer? Clean first then use a 0 degree spinning fitting? Seems to be much faster at removing the bulk of the paint before scraping.
I bet this could work. If you have the space, I say go for it. Just be careful if there is the potential for lead paint like we had in this video. I wouldn't rely on just the pressure washer only either. Get some good scraping in and let us know how it went!
If at all possible, do not wait until your house is peeling to repaint! The amount of time it takes to remove the peeling is labor intensive and costs more and if you are the one painting it, you will hate yourself for letting it go too long.
Great video guys! I’m a first time homeowner and a ton of our exterior paint is flaking off the wood in large pieces. There’s also what appears to be thin plaster peeling off with it - I can’t tell if it’s plaster or if the paint was just applied waaaay too thick. Is there another product I should be using before primer + paint? Clearly the last guys did a poor job (the paint isn’t super old) and I don’t want to make the same mistake. Thank. You!
Hi Amanda! Congratulations on getting your first home, how exciting! When it comes to paint, it's not always perfect and paint can be weird and unpredictable. We've seen paint stick well to surfaces we didn't think it could handle and we've seen some paint just fail to bond to other surfaces. When scraping your house for a new paint job the scraping is the most critical part. Using blades to scrape and even sanding the exterior gets that old cruddy paint off and allows the new coat to grab the exterior properly. Which is the goal before the new coat is applied. From what it sounds like, the new coat of paint didn't bond properly. How long ago was the exterior painted?
Going to start scraping Cedar shake siding this week. Wouldn't be bad if it weren't all extension ladder work. Thanks for saying that it's going to take some time. About a thousand sq ft. I have all summer. Using a two in one DB dura clean. Same color over color (wineberry dbAgedBeauty). Did this twenty years ago...fell off the ladder (removed those rocks since then) Thought I'd give it another go and nobody would come out to bid a job this small. The two keys #1 it will take a long time to scrape. #2 accept the fact of long hard work. Peace and thanks
Good luck Thomas! ladders can be tricky and dangerous, so we always make sure to go slow when extension ladders are involved. Making sure the base of the ladder is secure can mean all the difference when you get up in 40-50 feet of height on a ladder. Please be careful, and let us know if you have any questions. We are here to help!
Could you do the job in stages? e.g. scrape, encapsulate, and paint the north side, then repeat for each of the sides or does it all have to be done together? i.e. entire house scraped, encapsulated, and painted at the same time.
what should I do if I already tried to scrape hard enough from different angles but when I apply new paint the old paint decided to go flaky and ruin the paint job? do i just scrape again and just apply new coat of paint
If you wait days and it rains after peeling the paint, would more areas pop up do to weathering. Did a house and a week later after days of rain and extreme heat, there was more peeling than first seen when checked. It's like the edges came up and started peeling again
We quite often use paint & primer in one products. As always discuss with your local paint store to see what will be the best product(s) for your specific project.
Hi Zuhair, We have not found a chemical that will help with scraping. There are chemical strippers you can use to strip paint, but that is a completely different process.
Thanks for the video. The subject was easy to understand. :o) Do you have any videos on how to handle (powered) chalking paint? I'm 71 years old and I am going to have to paint my single story house. Where I live has very extreme heat conditions during the summer months ( up to 117F ). The paint that is on the house is over 17 years old and the colors are fading fast. I am going to paint it all just one color (white). I'm tired of humping up a tall ladder to paint the blue trim on the house, I'm too old for that. I am going to use a Graco magnum Pro x17 airless pain sprayer. I need to handle the (powdered ) chalking paint before I paint it. Is there anything that can be run through a pressure washer that would help wash off the chalking? I'm painting my own house because where I live you can't get anyone out to give you an estimate. They are not interested in a single story house that isn't large and cost big $$ to paint it. Like I said, I'm getting to old for this stuff. lol Thanks again for a great video, it was very helpful.
Hi Sidewinder, Glad you liked our video. For a house with chalky paint I would wash it with TSP-PF. You will likely remove a lot but not all of the chalkiness with this process. I would then plan to paint the house with a top grade paint such as Benjamin Moore Regal. This type of paint will help "bite" into and bond to the remaining chalky surface. These top of the line paints will cost more but will also give you years longevity protecting your house. I hope this is helpful. Tribble Painting
@@TribblePaintingCompany Thanks for the reply. It helped out a lot. I just tried some dish soap (brand name omitted) with a RV scrub brush on a test section of the house. It took off the chalking pretty good. I'll try the TSP and see is it works better. I can't use my power wash because I might get water in the house. I used just a garden hose and so far it looks good. Thanks again for reply. :o)
@@nmsidewinder Hey Sidewinder, hope you did well with washing off the chalky paint you mentioned. We've added a video about aluminum siding that covers the topic of chalky paint found on that type of siding. If you would like to check it out, it might help you out if you still need to deal with that stubborn oxidized factory finish. ua-cam.com/video/lcw_sjDFOhA/v-deo.html
If any lead paint is not removed, then the surface will be uneven when painted over, as the new paint will layer over the leftover old lead paint. How does one fix this? By sanding?
Thank god there are more informative videos. Scraping a hole house with a blade? Welcome to the era of electricity my man, just use proper tools. And lead is dangerous if ingested only, you don't need to work in full PPE with tape around you wrists like you are going to inspect Tchernobyl. A respirator is what you need
Hi Stephane, you're right there's more than one way to get things done. That being said, when lead is involved, we always recommend taking precautions to ensure everyone's safety, including yourself, your employees, and the client.
Look at the paint job that’s on the house now..you can clearly see the diffrnt levels in the paint…it’s not seemles..I don’t like how u can see where it was scraped and then just paint..diffrnt levels
Don't you ever sand those edges to make it level with the existing paint and boards? My mother and I painted her house 18 years ago and she had me getting rid of the loose paint but sanding all those edges down, so when paint is applied you cannot see all those rough weird edges, if you don't you still wind up with a crappy looking paint job because you can see all the areas that chipped off through the new paint. This is the most laborious and frustrating part of the entire job, but has to be done or anything else you do is just a waste of time and effort.
No one ever notices the old paint lines, especially if it's an old house. If it is a newer house and being painted for the first time I can understand the person who owns the house wanting the paint job to look original.
Ah the dreaded 1920s home-can be very nice looking, but from the era where lead paint was thought to be amazing and this fabulous material called asbestos could prevent your home from catching fire if you just put it everywhere.
never just use the "primer paint" on raw wood! oil base primer for sure. then your latex top coat paint. And probably some sanding just after scraping. with a dust mask 😷 of course. I would have a hard time wearing those rubber gloves though! doesn't it get all hot & sweaty!?
we could replace their siding, strip or sand the entire house, or scrape then paint & protect the house. We can't strip or sand paint this old, there are rules against it in the city and our state.
…mmm. 🤔 my sisters house was worse then this ! Buy a right angle grinder and stop by Harbor Freight and buy their WARRIOR abrasive disks 👍🏻 ! It’s 100 times faster and you can easily feather / sand down the edge of the paint to the wood to make a smoother looking surface !
this would normally be the case but with the risk for lead paint in this video, sanding is a big no-no for the Michigan guidelines for handling lead based paint. Always wear a mask as well!!
You're right, it does take a long time, but if we don't remove the loose paint, the new paint will bubble and peel. We don't just want to paint over a problem, we want to make sure we are able to do a quality paint job that will last. If you have a different way of removing the paint, we'd love to hear it. We are always open to new techniques!
Some will sand blast it off but if not done properly it can really damage the siding. I'm not a fan of it myself. Not a fan of scraping an entire house in 100° weather either but that's what I'm doing this week 😬
Paint scraping not your cup of tea? I hear ya. In the cold email space, I found Do You Mail is unlimited sending from numerous domains to be a lifesaver. It simply outperforms the others I tried in deliverability and ease of use. The automatic configuration of SPF DKIM DMARC takes back hours from my day. Some tools promise efficiency, this actually delivers it. The way you can scale is insane, and truly represents cost-effectiveness at its best. Get on board if flawless email setups are your thing.
Paint scraping not your cup of tea? I hear ya. In the cold email space, I found Do You Mail is unlimited sending from numerous domains to be a lifesaver. It simply outperforms the others I tried in deliverability and ease of use. The automatic configuration of SPF DKIM DMARC takes back hours from my day. Some tools promise efficiency, this actually delivers it. The way you can scale is insane, and truly represents cost-effectiveness at its best. Get on board if flawless email setups are your thing.
Doing my first job on someone's patio so thank you!! This was awesome
good luck!
It seems like the painting industry adopted a pressure wash and spray methodology because it saves time. If you tried to blast off that paint I'm sure some would come off but if you just gave it a glancing blow then paint over it, the customer would never know. In other words scraping is usually necessary and you can't just pressure wash and go. I like to use a 3" "chisel" style putty knife. Paint comes off like skin from a bad sunburn. Then sand the area back and feather with 80, prime then paint 2 coats. You are right, 99% of people would never notice a good job from a half assed job. I'm also a fan of peel bond type primers for the south side of the house, door frames, wood deck rails etc. Good video.
I tend to youtube videos and move on and that's it, this one however was very informative and actually gave it a thumbs up.
Glad it was helpful!
Bought a house from the 1920s, it had so many layers of old paint there are places where it was 3-4 mm thick. We opted to simply re-side based on the amount of labor that would have gone into painting. We had quotes to paint that were essentially the same as re-siding.
Bryan nice move. Many times we offer this advice to our clients depending on their goals, budget and how long they intend to stay in the house.
A vinyl sided home from the 1920's is just sad. If the cost was the same why not make the home look amazing with a proper high quality paint job? Now you have a plastic coated house ugh.
I was given a 1/2 inch scraper at 7 and told to scrape an entire house this this 60x60 feet. Top to bottom, middle of summer, and no shade. I will never forgive my parent for this when they knew it could be done faster with other methods. They put siding on after I was taken away by DCPS.
😢 so sorry
Oh, you’re the only one that said how those bubbles form! Thank you very much. I always assumed water was in them, but you explained it clearly thank you.
Glad we could help!
Very informative! I’m doing a house tomorrow! Specifically the fascia board…which has peeling paint. Thank you!
Glad it was helpful!
I painted a house this summer that had the same problem. I popped the blisters, and primed it. The owner wanted a dark green, and guess what? It blistered again. We have seen this happen to a few house's in the 40+ years I have been painting. Darker colors over lighter colors seems to be part of the problem. Other painters say you should never use paint, and only use stain. That seems great except you have to stain it more often then paint. My old friend took all of his siding off and turned it over, and then stained it. Now you can sand all the old stuff off, or use paint remover. That takes a lot of time, and cost a lot too! If it was my house that blistered I would do the best I could, and call it good!
Best video on UA-cam on prepping for painting.
After the scraping, you should sand a bit to feather the edges of the remaining paint. Otherwise, peeling is more likely to occur.
Yeah but sanding lead paint is generally ill advised.
@@NoTengoIdeaGuey while thats true and not saying lead paint isnt still out there on old homes most jobs have been painted in the last 40 years so a very less common worry
Cover surrounding things Because of the dust
Thanks! When I bought my house the paint looked great within 6 months it was bubbling and peeling. Now I am redoing and my handyman is doing a shit job saying primer will make everything adhere. Ugh, guess this 68 yr. old woman will have to do it herself. I want the job to last and not look like a hack job.
If it is cedar clapboard, paint just will not last, especially modern environmentally safe paint. It will start pealing after 3 years. I am working on my house, and having a problem reaching the top to scrap, and it really isn't all that high. Hence I am looking at YT lol
You helped me thanks, im about to redo a shed on my own
Good luck!!
Great Video! Very informative.
Glad you enjoyed it!
I did that to the back wall of my house last Spring/Summer season. The set up was exactly as shown in the video. Same type of tongue and groove boards. What a nightmare.
You do have to remove it all, especially the paint from under those lips where the tongue meets the grooves. What a hassle. If you don't remove all the old paint, it keeps popping up, especially, as in my case, it takes you more than a day to scrap it. What happens is that overnight heat or humidity ends up getting underneath the bit you just scraped, and if you left paint behind, that paint will end up lifting and start pealing. I was scrapping for days.
Take it all down to plain wood, or you are just wasting time and money. No other way around it. If you "gauge" the wood, get a good wood-filler such, fill in the spots you need to fill in, wait a day, sand it. Be prepared to scrap paint until the day you are ready to paint. Most likely, if you didn't scrape it all, you will still have stuff to scrape as you are painting it. Don't believe me? Try it!
Yeah I think I’m going to just put on vinyl siding considering the amount of bs that has to be done to get the paint ready. I’ve tried scraping and I’ve tried painting over but it seems no matter what like you said if you don’t get every bit off then it just chips off again.
hi.. thanks for your sharing. i wonder if we can use ‘sand blaster’ for this peeling methods
Try the hand scraper Sandvik. It has a carbide blade and shaves your paint real nice.
Thanks for the recommendation benoit!
What about using a pressure washer? Clean first then use a 0 degree spinning fitting? Seems to be much faster at removing the bulk of the paint before scraping.
I bet this could work. If you have the space, I say go for it. Just be careful if there is the potential for lead paint like we had in this video. I wouldn't rely on just the pressure washer only either. Get some good scraping in and let us know how it went!
If at all possible, do not wait until your house is peeling to repaint! The amount of time it takes to remove the peeling is labor intensive and costs more and if you are the one painting it, you will hate yourself for letting it go too long.
Thanks guys. 👍🏼
Also it’s good to see an Ann Arbor residential street again.
Glad you enjoyed it
Great video guys! I’m a first time homeowner and a ton of our exterior paint is flaking off the wood in large pieces. There’s also what appears to be thin plaster peeling off with it - I can’t tell if it’s plaster or if the paint was just applied waaaay too thick. Is there another product I should be using before primer + paint? Clearly the last guys did a poor job (the paint isn’t super old) and I don’t want to make the same mistake. Thank. You!
Hi Amanda! Congratulations on getting your first home, how exciting! When it comes to paint, it's not always perfect and paint can be weird and unpredictable. We've seen paint stick well to surfaces we didn't think it could handle and we've seen some paint just fail to bond to other surfaces. When scraping your house for a new paint job the scraping is the most critical part. Using blades to scrape and even sanding the exterior gets that old cruddy paint off and allows the new coat to grab the exterior properly. Which is the goal before the new coat is applied. From what it sounds like, the new coat of paint didn't bond properly. How long ago was the exterior painted?
Great video. Thanks for posting.
Thanks for watching!
after scraping for a day by myself i have a terrible muscle pain between my thumb and index finger. I hate scraping
it can be a drag sometimes, but if you don't scrape well, you might find yourself coming back to the same project more times than you wanted!
Is there such a thing as a scrapper on a reach pole for getting your roof fascia board ?
Hello, you can get extenders to attach to scrapers. I'm not sure they will give you the leverage you need to get all of the loose paint off though.
Going to start scraping Cedar shake siding this week. Wouldn't be bad if it weren't all extension ladder work. Thanks for saying that it's going to take some time. About a thousand sq ft. I have all summer. Using a two in one DB dura clean. Same color over color (wineberry dbAgedBeauty). Did this twenty years ago...fell off the ladder (removed those rocks since then) Thought I'd give it another go and nobody would come out to bid a job this small.
The two keys #1 it will take a long time to scrape. #2 accept the fact of long hard work.
Peace and thanks
Good luck Thomas! ladders can be tricky and dangerous, so we always make sure to go slow when extension ladders are involved. Making sure the base of the ladder is secure can mean all the difference when you get up in 40-50 feet of height on a ladder. Please be careful, and let us know if you have any questions. We are here to help!
Could you do the job in stages? e.g. scrape, encapsulate, and paint the north side, then repeat for each of the sides or does it all have to be done together? i.e. entire house scraped, encapsulated, and painted at the same time.
🤔don’t you sand it after ?
what should I do if I already tried to scrape hard enough from different angles but when I apply new paint the old paint decided to go flaky and ruin the paint job? do i just scrape again and just apply new coat of paint
Do you skim it with something or paint over it and call it done
If you wait days and it rains after peeling the paint, would more areas pop up do to weathering. Did a house and a week later after days of rain and extreme heat, there was more peeling than first seen when checked. It's like the edges came up and started peeling again
Yes, if you scrape and it rains before you get to prime those areas the moisture will lift some of the edges and you will have to re-scrape.
Do you need to sand for primer to stick
yes you always need to sand before applying paint to give it a key
What do you think of the primer/paint in one for exterior paint?
We quite often use paint & primer in one products. As always discuss with your local paint store to see what will be the best product(s) for your specific project.
No such thing as paint and primer in one.
Is there a chemical you can apply so that scraping becomes easier??
Hi Zuhair, We have not found a chemical that will help with scraping. There are chemical strippers you can use to strip paint, but that is a completely different process.
Thanks for the video. The subject was easy to understand. :o)
Do you have any videos on how to handle (powered) chalking paint?
I'm 71 years old and I am going to have to paint my single story house. Where I live has very extreme heat conditions during the summer months ( up to 117F ). The paint that is on the house is over 17 years old and the colors are fading fast. I am going to paint it all just one color (white). I'm tired of humping up a tall ladder to paint the blue trim on the house, I'm too old for that. I am going to use a Graco magnum Pro x17 airless pain sprayer. I need to handle the (powdered ) chalking paint before I paint it. Is there anything that can be run through a pressure washer that would help wash off the chalking? I'm painting my own house because where I live you can't get anyone out to give you an estimate. They are not interested in a single story house that isn't large and cost big $$ to paint it.
Like I said, I'm getting to old for this stuff. lol Thanks again for a great video, it was very helpful.
Hi Sidewinder, Glad you liked our video. For a house with chalky paint I would wash it with TSP-PF. You will likely remove a lot but not all of the chalkiness with this process. I would then plan to paint the house with a top grade paint such as Benjamin Moore Regal. This type of paint will help "bite" into and bond to the remaining chalky surface. These top of the line paints will cost more but will also give you years longevity protecting your house. I hope this is helpful. Tribble Painting
@@TribblePaintingCompany Thanks for the reply. It helped out a lot. I just tried some dish soap (brand name omitted) with a RV scrub brush on a test section of the house. It took off the chalking pretty good. I'll try the TSP and see is it works better. I can't use my power wash because I might get water in the house. I used just a garden hose and so far it looks good. Thanks again for reply. :o)
@@nmsidewinder Hey Sidewinder, hope you did well with washing off the chalky paint you mentioned. We've added a video about aluminum siding that covers the topic of chalky paint found on that type of siding. If you would like to check it out, it might help you out if you still need to deal with that stubborn oxidized factory finish. ua-cam.com/video/lcw_sjDFOhA/v-deo.html
Thanks you sr for this video
If any lead paint is not removed, then the surface will be uneven when painted over, as the new paint will layer over the leftover old lead paint. How does one fix this? By sanding?
yes with 40 grit sandpaper or a painteater
Nothing about removing the dust or particles from the wood before painting?
how do you do that? water it down wait for it to dry? use a deck Mold remover spray? or just leaf blow it and dust it with towels
Brother I have scraping paint for 2 years with no proper protection #rip
Yikes man
You and me die early cuz
Thanks.
Do you scrap then sand paint edges then spot prime ? Do you pressure was before or after ?
James we wash the house first, then scrape and prime last.
good .thanks guy's
Thank god there are more informative videos. Scraping a hole house with a blade? Welcome to the era of electricity my man, just use proper tools. And lead is dangerous if ingested only, you don't need to work in full PPE with tape around you wrists like you are going to inspect Tchernobyl. A respirator is what you need
Hi Stephane, you're right there's more than one way to get things done. That being said, when lead is involved, we always recommend taking precautions to ensure everyone's safety, including yourself, your employees, and the client.
What other methods? I scrapped my house with a 1. Inch scraper....tons of fun
Look at the paint job that’s on the house now..you can clearly see the diffrnt levels in the paint…it’s not seemles..I don’t like how u can see where it was scraped and then just paint..diffrnt levels
Agreed
Don't you ever sand those edges to make it level with the existing paint and boards? My mother and I painted her house 18 years ago and she had me getting rid of the loose paint but sanding all those edges down, so when paint is applied you cannot see all those rough weird edges, if you don't you still wind up with a crappy looking paint job because you can see all the areas that chipped off through the new paint. This is the most laborious and frustrating part of the entire job, but has to be done or anything else you do is just a waste of time and effort.
Feathering the edges by sanding is ideal but that's lead paint so their avoiding sanding, that dust gets everywhere.
No one ever notices the old paint lines, especially if it's an old house. If it is a newer house and being painted for the first time I can understand the person who owns the house wanting the paint job to look original.
Thank you
You're welcome
Ah the dreaded 1920s home-can be very nice looking, but from the era where lead paint was thought to be amazing and this fabulous material called asbestos could prevent your home from catching fire if you just put it everywhere.
Do I need to prime whole house or just where I scraped?
just where you take it down to wood. the purpose of primer is to help seal the wood and create better contact between wood and new paint
never just use the "primer paint" on raw wood! oil base primer for sure. then your latex top coat paint. And probably some sanding just after scraping. with a dust mask 😷 of course.
I would have a hard time wearing those rubber gloves though! doesn't it get all hot & sweaty!?
You'll see all the ridges of left over paint?... you don't just remove and prime
we could replace their siding, strip or sand the entire house, or scrape then paint & protect the house. We can't strip or sand paint this old, there are rules against it in the city and our state.
We should have at leat 100000 subs tho
a tip : watch movies on Flixzone. I've been using it for watching loads of movies lately.
@Jonathan Miller yup, been watching on Flixzone for since november myself =)
@Jonathan Miller Yea, been using flixzone for since december myself :D
@Jonathan Miller yup, I've been using flixzone for years myself =)
This guy could use a professional paint eater? Is he a pro???
Many types of paint have met their match when Aaron is on the job site!
…mmm. 🤔 my sisters house was worse then this ! Buy a right angle grinder and stop by Harbor Freight and buy their WARRIOR abrasive disks 👍🏻 ! It’s 100 times faster and you can easily feather / sand down the edge of the paint to the wood to make a smoother looking surface !
this would normally be the case but with the risk for lead paint in this video, sanding is a big no-no for the Michigan guidelines for handling lead based paint. Always wear a mask as well!!
Power washer
Funny
Is it necessary to dress like you're going into Chernobyl?
What about sanding bloke???? You’re a hack if you don’t sand.
I'll advised to sand where lead paint is
Are you kidding? You're scraping all that paint off of all that surface area lol that would take forever... Smh
You're right, it does take a long time, but if we don't remove the loose paint, the new paint will bubble and peel. We don't just want to paint over a problem, we want to make sure we are able to do a quality paint job that will last. If you have a different way of removing the paint, we'd love to hear it. We are always open to new techniques!
Some will sand blast it off but if not done properly it can really damage the siding. I'm not a fan of it myself. Not a fan of scraping an entire house in 100° weather either but that's what I'm doing this week 😬
Paint scraping not your cup of tea? I hear ya. In the cold email space, I found Do You Mail is unlimited sending from numerous domains to be a lifesaver. It simply outperforms the others I tried in deliverability and ease of use. The automatic configuration of SPF DKIM DMARC takes back hours from my day. Some tools promise efficiency, this actually delivers it. The way you can scale is insane, and truly represents cost-effectiveness at its best. Get on board if flawless email setups are your thing.
Paint scraping not your cup of tea? I hear ya. In the cold email space, I found Do You Mail is unlimited sending from numerous domains to be a lifesaver. It simply outperforms the others I tried in deliverability and ease of use. The automatic configuration of SPF DKIM DMARC takes back hours from my day. Some tools promise efficiency, this actually delivers it. The way you can scale is insane, and truly represents cost-effectiveness at its best. Get on board if flawless email setups are your thing.