Anyone ever tackled this? Whats the skill level? I'm looking at kitchen, living and dining rooms, and 1 room on the 2nd floor, and the 3rd floor bedroom as well. We are about to purchase a home that was built in 1940. It has original wood flooring of course throughout, but carpet covers most of it, especially on the master floor. From what I am reading, the only difficult thing is going to be patching holes if this home had radiator heating, which 99% of them do being that old in the Northeast. Basically pull up carpet, clean up, rent a push buffer, and stain, repeat.....Granted I haven't moved in yet or pulled the carpet, but I'm willing to bet it will need refinishing. The 2nd floor has 2 of the bedrooms with the original wood, and it looks great. Thanks in advance.
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Just redid the floors in my rent house in Arl after last tenant move out and trashed the carpet.
I bought the house from a flipper and he all ready had carpet down. Fast forward several years, I have to decide to replace carpet, tile, or ?????
Pull back carpet to find the origional oak floors.
When I pulled up the tack strips there were only a couple areas that needed some putty work. Make sure to get a stainable putty.
He had all kinds if paint overspray & mud droppings he carpeted over.
So I spent about 30hrs sanding everything down.
I used a square floor sander. Used screens where it wasn't too bad to try and not go through the finish, & used some aggressive paper everywhere else.
Secret is to move the sander around fairly quick. If you don't, the old finish gums up on the sandpaper. I finished it off with a 160 grit as I had to go a little further down on the wood than I wanted and wanted to leave the wood pores open to accept the finish as deep as possible.
On about 900sf I ended up using 8 gallons of finish. I just used a satin clear to keep the look of the natural wood. I didn't want it stained.
I was MORE than happy with the finished results & my new tenant LOVES the new floor (and is taking care of them too!!)
I can email you before and after pics if you want. No way to post them.
Donsvo came and drank some beer and helped sand for a little too.
To answer your question: if you are a mechanically inclined person who pays attention to detail you can do it. You will find quickly however when you start sanding around baseboards @ door frames why they charge what they do!! Fairly easy job, LOTS of manual labor!!!
Feel free to hit me up with any questions I might be able to help with.
John86 SVO
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Originally posted by 1fast4 View PostJust redid the floors in my rent house in Arl after last tenant move out and trashed the carpet.
I bought the house from a flipper and he all ready had carpet down. Fast forward several years, I have to decide to replace carpet, tile, or ?????
Pull back carpet to find the origional oak floors.
When I pulled up the tack strips there were only a couple areas that needed some putty work. Make sure to get a stainable putty.
He had all kinds if paint overspray & mud droppings he carpeted over.
So I spent about 30hrs sanding everything down.
I used a square floor sander. Used screens where it wasn't too bad to try and not go through the finish, & used some aggressive paper everywhere else.
Secret is to move the sander around fairly quick. If you don't, the old finish gums up on the sandpaper. I finished it off with a 160 grit as I had to go a little further down on the wood than I wanted and wanted to leave the wood pores open to accept the finish as deep as possible.
On about 900sf I ended up using 8 gallons of finish. I just used a satin clear to keep the look of the natural wood. I didn't want it stained.
I was MORE than happy with the finished results & my new tenant LOVES the new floor (and is taking care of them too!!)
I can email you before and after pics if you want. No way to post them.
Donsvo came and drank some beer and helped sand for a little too.
To answer your question: if you are a mechanically inclined person who pays attention to detail you can do it. You will find quickly however when you start sanding around baseboards @ door frames why they charge what they do!! Fairly easy job, LOTS of manual labor!!!
Feel free to hit me up with any questions I might be able to help with.
John
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