mm

10/05/2011 2:53 PM

Door scratches - suggestions for a fix

A guy called me up, because he got my name
from somewhere else and wanted to know of I
knew anyone with a wide (36" planner or sander).

When I questioned him on what he needed it for,
he told me that he recently moved into a place
and the previous owner's dog scratched the front
door. The scratches are about 1/8" deep and
are just along the bottom part of the door.

I told him that perhaps a cabinet shop with a big
sander might help, but as an alternative, perhaps
hand sanding with a sander might be better.

I also suggested a handheld planner but I think
that was a bit overkill.

All I know is that the door is some sort of hardwood, he
wasn't sure what it was and 35 1/2" in width.

Any other suggestions?

MJ


This topic has 8 replies

nn

in reply to "[email protected]" on 10/05/2011 2:53 PM

11/05/2011 2:35 AM

On May 10, 6:55=A0pm, "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
wrote:
> I just thought, if he wants to keep the door, to skin it with
> a veneer.
>
> Would solve a lot of problems.
>
> MJ

Actually, the kick plate idea is better. If you skin it with a door
skin ( +/- 1/8" thick) you will have to reset the hinges and locks, or
tear off the stops and reset them if it is on the front side. Adding
to the thickness will change the fit in the opening. It might require
you to look hard at the hardware as well as the connecting screws for
the lock/latch halves may not be long enough to get a good bite.

If it is on the back side of the door, you can add the veneer, and
only worry about the lock/latch.

Just my 0.02.

Robert

LM

"Lee Michaels"

in reply to "[email protected]" on 10/05/2011 2:53 PM

10/05/2011 6:18 PM



<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:24e6adb9-7cee-463f-8a5f-1d3a0a2ffa4d@s16g2000prf.googlegroups.com...
> A guy called me up, because he got my name
> from somewhere else and wanted to know of I
> knew anyone with a wide (36" planner or sander).
>
> When I questioned him on what he needed it for,
> he told me that he recently moved into a place
> and the previous owner's dog scratched the front
> door. The scratches are about 1/8" deep and
> are just along the bottom part of the door.
>
> I told him that perhaps a cabinet shop with a big
> sander might help, but as an alternative, perhaps
> hand sanding with a sander might be better.
>
> I also suggested a handheld planner but I think
> that was a bit overkill.
>
> All I know is that the door is some sort of hardwood, he
> wasn't sure what it was and 35 1/2" in width.
>
> Any other suggestions?
>
I don't know how appropriate this would be. But I have just covered the
bottom of the door with other material. I have used some aluminum or some
other kind of wood. I have seen the scratches filled in with putty and
covered with lexan (polycarbonate). I know that a lot of folks consider
their doors to be a work of art and should be treated like furniture.

I had a cat who used to jump on the screen door and tear it up. I just
installed a big piece of lexan over it. The problem was solved. The cat
got really pissed off though! LOL


Ll

"Leon"

in reply to "[email protected]" on 10/05/2011 2:53 PM

11/05/2011 6:44 AM

wrote in message
news:24e6adb9-7cee-463f-8a5f-1d3a0a2ffa4d@s16g2000prf.googlegroups.com...

A guy called me up, because he got my name
from somewhere else and wanted to know of I
knew anyone with a wide (36" planner or sander).

When I questioned him on what he needed it for,
he told me that he recently moved into a place
and the previous owner's dog scratched the front
door. The scratches are about 1/8" deep and
are just along the bottom part of the door.

I told him that perhaps a cabinet shop with a big
sander might help, but as an alternative, perhaps
hand sanding with a sander might be better.

I also suggested a handheld planner but I think
that was a bit overkill.

All I know is that the door is some sort of hardwood, he
wasn't sure what it was and 35 1/2" in width.

Any other suggestions?

MJ

More information please.. :~)

Is it a pretty or expensive door?

If not,

Might simply want to bondo/putty in the gouges and paint the door.
Or replace it for $50.





Rr

RicodJour

in reply to "[email protected]" on 10/05/2011 2:53 PM

10/05/2011 3:25 PM

On May 10, 5:53=A0pm, "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
wrote:
> A guy called me up, because he got my name
> from somewhere else and wanted to know of I
> knew anyone with a wide (36" planner or sander).
>
> When I questioned him on what he needed it for,
> he told me that he recently moved into a place
> and the previous owner's dog scratched the front
> door. The scratches are about 1/8" deep and
> are just along the bottom part of the door.
>
> I told him that perhaps a cabinet shop with a big
> sander might help, but as an alternative, perhaps
> hand sanding with a sander might be better.
>
> I also suggested a handheld planner but I think
> that was a bit overkill.
>
> All I know is that the door is some sort of hardwood, he
> wasn't sure what it was and 35 1/2" in width.
>
> Any other suggestions?

Really depends on where the scratches are. Filler or wax sticks and
touch up toning would require a fair bit of time and a good eye.
Maybe glue on a piece of matching wood plywood and put some moldings
around it to make it look like a raised panel? If the scratches are
right up to the edge of the door, then that won't work, but you could
veneer the whole door. If you're doing the job it might be time to
upsell the guy on something a little more involved and a little more
lucrative. Maybe a nice herringbone pattern for some visual
interest. Or just get a new blank and start fresh.

R

mm

in reply to "[email protected]" on 10/05/2011 2:53 PM

10/05/2011 4:55 PM

I just thought, if he wants to keep the door, to skin it with
a veneer.

Would solve a lot of problems.

MJ

Mm

-MIKE-

in reply to "[email protected]" on 10/05/2011 2:53 PM

10/05/2011 5:28 PM

On 5/10/11 4:53 PM, [email protected] wrote:
> A guy called me up, because he got my name
> from somewhere else and wanted to know of I
> knew anyone with a wide (36" planner or sander).
>
> When I questioned him on what he needed it for,
> he told me that he recently moved into a place
> and the previous owner's dog scratched the front
> door. The scratches are about 1/8" deep and
> are just along the bottom part of the door.
>
> I told him that perhaps a cabinet shop with a big
> sander might help, but as an alternative, perhaps
> hand sanding with a sander might be better.
>
> I also suggested a handheld planner but I think
> that was a bit overkill.
>
> All I know is that the door is some sort of hardwood, he
> wasn't sure what it was and 35 1/2" in width.
>
> Any other suggestions?
>
> MJ

My initial thought is, "kickplate."

If those scratches are in fact 1/8" deep, sanding down that far in one
area will look very strange. If it's a solid core door with a veneer,
sanding that deep with likely go all the way through the veneer. If the
door is painted, fill the scratches, sand and paint. If it's stained,
maybe it's time to paint the whole door. :-)


--

-MIKE-

"Playing is not something I do at night, it's my function in life"
--Elvin Jones (1927-2004)
--
http://mikedrums.com
[email protected]
---remove "DOT" ^^^^ to reply

BB

Bill

in reply to "[email protected]" on 10/05/2011 2:53 PM

10/05/2011 6:35 PM

[email protected] wrote:
> A guy called me up, because he got my name
> from somewhere else and wanted to know of I
> knew anyone with a wide (36" planner or sander).
>
> When I questioned him on what he needed it for,
> he told me that he recently moved into a place
> and the previous owner's dog scratched the front
> door. The scratches are about 1/8" deep and
> are just along the bottom part of the door.
>
> I told him that perhaps a cabinet shop with a big
> sander might help, but as an alternative, perhaps
> hand sanding with a sander might be better.
>
> I also suggested a handheld planner but I think
> that was a bit overkill.
>
> All I know is that the door is some sort of hardwood, he
> wasn't sure what it was and 35 1/2" in width.
>
> Any other suggestions?
>
> MJ

MJ,

Sounds like a perfect job for hand planes, no? Is that what you
meant by "handheld planner"? It seems like it wouldn't be too hard to
achieve "good enough" since the repair will be on the back of the bottom
of a door, unless the door's location is highly conspicuous. In this
case, maybe the back of the door needs to be "darkened" a bit.
Disclaimer: They let anyone post on Usenet. I am not a woodworking
professional.

Bill

kk

k-nuttle

in reply to "[email protected]" on 10/05/2011 2:53 PM

10/05/2011 6:56 PM

On 5/10/2011 6:18 PM, Lee Michaels wrote:
>
>
> <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:24e6adb9-7cee-463f-8a5f-1d3a0a2ffa4d@s16g2000prf.googlegroups.com...
>> A guy called me up, because he got my name
>> from somewhere else and wanted to know of I
>> knew anyone with a wide (36" planner or sander).
>>
>> When I questioned him on what he needed it for,
>> he told me that he recently moved into a place
>> and the previous owner's dog scratched the front
>> door. The scratches are about 1/8" deep and
>> are just along the bottom part of the door.
>>
>> I told him that perhaps a cabinet shop with a big
>> sander might help, but as an alternative, perhaps
>> hand sanding with a sander might be better.
>>
>> I also suggested a handheld planner but I think
>> that was a bit overkill.
>>
>> All I know is that the door is some sort of hardwood, he
>> wasn't sure what it was and 35 1/2" in width.
>>
>> Any other suggestions?
>>
> I don't know how appropriate this would be. But I have just covered the
> bottom of the door with other material. I have used some aluminum or
> some other kind of wood. I have seen the scratches filled in with putty
> and covered with lexan (polycarbonate). I know that a lot of folks
> consider their doors to be a work of art and should be treated like
> furniture.
>
> I had a cat who used to jump on the screen door and tear it up. I just
> installed a big piece of lexan over it. The problem was solved. The cat
> got really pissed off though! LOL
>
>
>
If the door is a front entrance door, and the house will support it a
brass kick plate that corvers the scratches looks real classy. Of course
the other door fittings would have to be changed to match.


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