I picked up an exterior door with two thoughts in mind.
First was to salvage the 20x30 glass since it is old and has the
dimples and is wavy. No particular project in mind just think it may
come in handy. So I carefully removed the molding and salvaged the
glass.
Second, and more importantly, was to salvage the wood. I scraped a
little finish off to reveal beautiful Chestnut that could be useful
for some project. Who wouldn't like to get their hands on a couple 7'
Chesnut 2x6s. I carefully removed all the nails and got my spreader
clamps. Surprisingly it started to come apart pretty easily. It was
than I saw the glue lines and alternating grain on the tenons. The
rails & stiles were essentialy veneered blockboard.
Guess I should have looked at the bottom edge of the door before going
through all that trouble. All the 'wood' went in the dumpster this
morning.
Me too. What a hottie.
On 4/8/2011 1:40 PM, Robatoy wrote:
> On Apr 8, 12:50 pm, Limp Arbor<[email protected]> wrote:
>> I picked up an exterior door with two thoughts in mind.
>>
>> First was to salvage the 20x30 glass since it is old and has the
>> dimples and is wavy. No particular project in mind just think it may
>> come in handy. So I carefully removed the molding and salvaged the
>> glass.
>>
>> Second, and more importantly, was to salvage the wood. I scraped a
>> little finish off to reveal beautiful Chestnut that could be useful
>> for some project. Who wouldn't like to get their hands on a couple 7'
>> Chesnut 2x6s. I carefully removed all the nails and got my spreader
>> clamps. Surprisingly it started to come apart pretty easily. It was
>> than I saw the glue lines and alternating grain on the tenons. The
>> rails& stiles were essentialy veneered blockboard.
>>
>> Guess I should have looked at the bottom edge of the door before going
>> through all that trouble. All the 'wood' went in the dumpster this
>> morning.
>
> When I think like an Egyptian, I think of Susanna Hoffs....
On Apr 8, 12:50=A0pm, Limp Arbor <[email protected]> wrote:
> I picked up an exterior door with two thoughts in mind.
>
> First was to salvage the 20x30 glass since it is old and has the
> dimples and is wavy. =A0No particular project in mind just think it may
> come in handy. =A0So I carefully removed the molding and salvaged the
> glass.
>
> Second, and more importantly, was to salvage the wood. =A0I scraped a
> little finish off to reveal beautiful Chestnut that could be useful
> for some project. =A0Who wouldn't like to get their hands on a couple 7'
> Chesnut 2x6s. =A0I carefully removed all the nails and got my spreader
> clamps. =A0Surprisingly it started to come apart pretty easily. =A0It was
> than I saw the glue lines and alternating grain on the tenons. =A0The
> rails & stiles were essentialy veneered blockboard.
>
> Guess I should have looked at the bottom edge of the door before going
> through all that trouble. =A0All the 'wood' went in the dumpster this
> morning.
When I think like an Egyptian, I think of Susanna Hoffs....
"Limp Arbor" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:3e8ca224-83e6-488a-935e-fdfaa4e3f4a0@e26g2000vbz.googlegroups.com...
>I picked up an exterior door with two thoughts in mind.
>
> First was to salvage the 20x30 glass since it is old and has the
> dimples and is wavy. No particular project in mind just think it may
> come in handy. So I carefully removed the molding and salvaged the
> glass.
>
> Second, and more importantly, was to salvage the wood. I scraped a
> little finish off to reveal beautiful Chestnut that could be useful
> for some project. Who wouldn't like to get their hands on a couple 7'
> Chesnut 2x6s. I carefully removed all the nails and got my spreader
> clamps. Surprisingly it started to come apart pretty easily. It was
> than I saw the glue lines and alternating grain on the tenons. The
> rails & stiles were essentialy veneered blockboard.
>
> Guess I should have looked at the bottom edge of the door before going
> through all that trouble. All the 'wood' went in the dumpster this
> morning.
You win some, you lose some. Been there done that. ww
George W Frost wrote:
> "Limp Arbor" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:3e8ca224-83e6-488a-935e-fdfaa4e3f4a0@e26g2000vbz.googlegroups.com...
>> I picked up an exterior door with two thoughts in mind.
>>
>> First was to salvage the 20x30 glass since it is old and has the
>> dimples and is wavy. No particular project in mind just think it may
>> come in handy. So I carefully removed the molding and salvaged the
>> glass.
>>
>> Second, and more importantly, was to salvage the wood. I scraped a
>> little finish off to reveal beautiful Chestnut that could be useful
>> for some project. Who wouldn't like to get their hands on a couple
>> 7' Chesnut 2x6s. I carefully removed all the nails and got my
>> spreader clamps. Surprisingly it started to come apart pretty
>> easily. It was than I saw the glue lines and alternating grain on
>> the tenons. The rails & stiles were essentialy veneered blockboard.
>>
>> Guess I should have looked at the bottom edge of the door before
>> going through all that trouble. All the 'wood' went in the dumpster
>> this morning.
>
> You also might find that the glass is not re-usable if you have to
> cut it. I have found that with age, glass tends to go very brittle
> and will not cut where you want it to.
> Maybe a pro glass cutter will do a good job
that isn't correct. the glass isn't changing to be more brittle. it may
either not be annealed well, or embedded dirt may prevent a good score
without scrubbing it with something (blue scrubbie, for example).
regards,
charlie
http://chaniarts.com
"Limp Arbor" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:3e8ca224-83e6-488a-935e-fdfaa4e3f4a0@e26g2000vbz.googlegroups.com...
>I picked up an exterior door with two thoughts in mind.
>
> First was to salvage the 20x30 glass since it is old and
> has the
> dimples and is wavy. No particular project in mind just
> think it may
> come in handy. So I carefully removed the molding and
> salvaged the
> glass.
>
> Second, and more importantly, was to salvage the wood. I
> scraped a
> little finish off to reveal beautiful Chestnut that could
> be useful
> for some project. Who wouldn't like to get their hands on
> a couple 7'
> Chesnut 2x6s. I carefully removed all the nails and got
> my spreader
> clamps. Surprisingly it started to come apart pretty
> easily. It was
> than I saw the glue lines and alternating grain on the
> tenons. The
> rails & stiles were essentialy veneered blockboard.
>
> Guess I should have looked at the bottom edge of the door
> before going
> through all that trouble. All the 'wood' went in the
> dumpster this
> morning.
LA:
It happens to everybody. That ithis won't occur again owes
to your intelligence.
You're going to love--and never forget-- this one.
We all know the word "scrutiny", which roots in the meaning
of investigate/examine (scrutari) and ends at the Latin
(scruta) for trash. Seems like an odd couple, no?
But there is a proverbial connection.
"Man who buys goods without a hard look, might
get trash."
Thanks for reminding my eyes to stay open.
Regards,
Edward Hennessey
"Limp Arbor" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:3e8ca224-83e6-488a-935e-fdfaa4e3f4a0@e26g2000vbz.googlegroups.com...
>I picked up an exterior door with two thoughts in mind.
>
> First was to salvage the 20x30 glass since it is old and has the
> dimples and is wavy. No particular project in mind just think it may
> come in handy. So I carefully removed the molding and salvaged the
> glass.
>
> Second, and more importantly, was to salvage the wood. I scraped a
> little finish off to reveal beautiful Chestnut that could be useful
> for some project. Who wouldn't like to get their hands on a couple 7'
> Chesnut 2x6s. I carefully removed all the nails and got my spreader
> clamps. Surprisingly it started to come apart pretty easily. It was
> than I saw the glue lines and alternating grain on the tenons. The
> rails & stiles were essentialy veneered blockboard.
>
> Guess I should have looked at the bottom edge of the door before going
> through all that trouble. All the 'wood' went in the dumpster this
> morning.
You also might find that the glass is not re-usable if you have to cut it.
I have found that with age, glass tends to go very brittle and will not cut
where you want it to.
Maybe a pro glass cutter will do a good job