home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: rec.woodworking
- Path: sparky!uunet!wupost!micro-heart-of-gold.mit.edu!xn.ll.mit.edu!xn!tonyb
- From: tonyb@juliet.ll.mit.edu ( Tony Berke )
- Subject: Re: refinishing kitchen cabinets
- In-Reply-To: grun@intellistor.com's message of Tue, 22 Dec 92 19:21:42 GMT
- Message-ID: <TONYB.92Dec23111652@ursula.juliet.ll.mit.edu>
- Sender: usenet@xn.ll.mit.edu
- Organization: M.I.T. Lincoln Lab - Group 43
- References: <01GSKQS26ZPU8Y4YLT@BIIVAX.DP.BECKMAN.COM>
- <1992Dec22.192142.7959@intellistor.com>
- Date: 23 Dec 92 11:16:52
- Lines: 24
-
- In article <1992Dec22.192142.7959@intellistor.com> grun@intellistor.com (Paul Grun) writes:
-
- In <01GSKQS26ZPU8Y4YLT@BIIVAX.DP.BECKMAN.COM> RMTYE@BIIVAX.DP.BECKMAN.COM writes:
-
- >My Girl friend (Kathy) has just had her Kitchen cabinets
- >professionally refinished and new doors hung. The job turned out
-
- (deleted...)
-
- > The finish appears to be a polyurethane of some kind and since he
- > used an HVLP sprayer to apply it and it dried very quickly I would
- > guess it's water based.
-
- I'd bet a nickel that he sprayed a lacquer. Lacquer has the property
- of drying very quickly...
-
-
- It might, but if the refinisher was using a water-based stripper, he
- might be a bit eco-conscious, so a water-based urethane would be
- consistant. Water-based urethanes dry quite quickly, and are commonly
- applied with HVLP spray rigs. I love the stuff, even with a brush.
-
-
- Tony
-