RS2E aggressiveness

jc

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Joined
Aug 13, 2012
Messages
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How is the RS2E for stripping finish - paint, laquer,... at low grits 40-80?  Will it work?  Or is the proper workflow to use the rotex for stripping first before using the RS2E for flattening eg. a tabletop?  Thanks. :) 

I'm thinking using the RO150 for stripping without the RS2E might leave dips.  Opinions?

Also, can the RS2E do flat scribing work?
 
There you go you figured out the right sequence, RO first, RS2 to finish and further flatten

Sal

 
I'm lazy that way... If I could get by with less work (or tools since I dont have the RO150) I'd opt for it. 

Sal, thanks for replying.  Are you saying the RS2E wouldn't work for removing material?

As a yardstick, do you think the RS2E would be able to remove the stain from a rad oak tabletop?  I tried to do that with the Ceros and being how open-grained red oak is, the Ceros was lacking. 
 
I stripped a 310 Sq Ft deck using an RS2E once.  The 2nd time, I got a RO150.  It will work, but not the most ideal of tools for doing it!
 
As Tim stated -- it will work and can be quite aggressive with the coarser grit papers, but not ideal for this application and will take longer doing it.  The RO 150 would be a faster tool for the stripping and then finishing with the RS2E to ensure a uniform, flat surface.

Scot
 
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