Removing Hard-to-Remove Linoleum Remnants
Our contractor has not been able to get these bits of old linoleum off the wood floor in one corner of what will be our living room. Big bummer. Anyone have any special tips? We not thrilled with living with this crap on the floor or the alternative of replacing the floor. There has to…
Our contractor has not been able to get these bits of old linoleum off the wood floor in one corner of what will be our living room. Big bummer. Anyone have any special tips? We not thrilled with living with this crap on the floor or the alternative of replacing the floor. There has to be some secret technique…
just a big big THANK YOU to the milwaukee architect (posted 11/24/07). the wallpaper steamer was – without a doubt – the best $27 i spent on this entire, not completely rewarding (and it is still going on), but necessary project. what a difference. and it just lets the tiles slip up so easily. had used other methods first but the wallpaper steamer was soo much easier, and pretty damned fast, too.
for the sticky stuff still there after the tiles come away, have been using turpentine to get the bulk of it up (with a towel and some elbow grease) and then afta to get the last tackiness up. it works, but very it’s very laborious. still better than those hideous vinyl tiles that were there, tho. am painting the floor (have only plywood to work with, no lovely hardwood floors below, sadly), and need to sand it first to get it all ready for the next stage.
just thought my heartache might serve someone as this post did me. and the wallpaper steamer was the best of ALL the ideas i found in my extensive search, so thanks again milwaukee architect….
Save yourself the money and the hassle of renting a steamer. Just use a hair dryer. Works great. Lay it on the floor aimed at the tile, wait about 20 seconds and peel off. I used this on 25 year old very thin, very glued down, stubborn linoleum. For the more stubborn spots you may have to hold and aim the dryer. Worked like a charm. Just remember to stop every now and then so you don’t burn out your hairdryer.
Yes, the Hot Water method works – we have a 1925 bungalow in the Twin Cities area, and after removing two layers of ceramic tile, and one layer of linoleum, we came across the seemingly rock hard adhesive used to glue the linoleum down.
Up until the steaming method, we were chiseling the crud off the maple floor, a very slow and tedious process.
Surprisingly, I had called a local flooring installer, and they recommended paint stripper, and working a small area at a time. They said it is an incredibly slow process.
Thanks again for the great tip.
Thank you sooooooo much to the person who suggested using the wallpaper steamer. While I didn’t have quite as good of luck with it as you did, I am not complaining at all! The tar came up immediately, just as though I were sweaping it off the floor. Thank you for saving me hours of tourturous work.
You rock!
I am an architect in Milwaukee. I am on my second 80 year old bungalow. I am in the process of removing my second kitchen and hall way floors. I’ve tried most of the traditional methods, but today discovered the simplest, easiest and least costly process of removing linoleum and the tar paper backing and adhesive underneath them.
I’ve read most all the postings and can add my own two cents to the discussion.
1997: In my first home, I removed linoleum from the hallway by pulling it up. I then used heat gun to heat the adhesive and tar backing and scraped them off the hard wood floors. Very labor intensive and odorous.
In the kitchen of that house, there were two layers of flooring: a top layer of sheet vinyl with an underlayment and linoleum underneath that. We pulled up the sheet vinyl, pulled up the linoleum and scraped the tar paper backing and adhesive off the soft wood subfloor. Very labor intensive. It took forever. I was younger and stupid then. But it worked. Who knows what I breathed in when I scraped off the adhesive!
2007: With this kitchen floor, there was a layer of original linoleum covered with a 12 by 12 vinyl tile. I pulled up the vinyl tile and linoleum by hand, using a paint scraper to pull it up. I tried scraping the tar backing and adhesive, but decided I could not do that again. There had to be a better way.
I decided to try chemicals first. I bought Krud Kutter and also Jasco Adhesive Remover, both from Ace Hardware. I sprayed a 1 foot by 1 foot area with the the Krud Kutter and another with the Jasco Remover. Surprisingly the Krud Kutter worked better at removing the tar paper. It made it more pliable, but it still had to be scraped off with a lot of elbow grease. The Jasco worked less efficiently but seemed to soften more of the the adhesive than the Krud Kutter.
THE FINAL SOLUTION: I had removed wall paper from the walls in this room and cleaned the walls earlier in the day. Of course, lots of hot water managed to get on the perimeter of the floor at the walls. I noticed that this was surprisingly pliable. So, having read about boiling water in the forum, I put down an old bath towel folded in half on the tar paper. I then boiled a tea kettle full of water. I poured this on the towel and waited for it to cool. when I removed the towel, the tar paper and most of the adhesive wiped right up. It was a bit messy, but not too much so.
So, I decided that steaming the tar paper and adhesive would be the best choice. I went to Home Depot and rented a steamer for wall paper. It cost 20 dollars for 4 hours.
After warming up the steamer (about 25 minutes) I sat on a stool and laid the steamer applicator (which was about 8″ x 12″ on a section of flooring. I left it there for one minute to 90 seconds. Then moved it to another area to steam. The tar paper and adhesive scraped off the wood subfloor with NO effort. While the next section was steaming, I took a bucket with hot water and a heavy duty scotch-bright pad and scrubbed the area where the paper had just been removed, then wiped it up with a wet cloth.
In this manner, I removed the tar paper and adhesive from a soft wood sub floor in this area of the room (6′ x 10′ area) in less than 2 hours. It cost only 20 dollars for the steamer and little effort at all–in fact, if I scraped too hard I found that it would more likely damage the edges of the subfloor boards. I found it was best to pull the scraper towards me without a lot of pressure. The tar paper just peeled right off like wet paper towel.
So, having tried most of the methods described in the forum, the only method I would use is a wall paper steamer. I thought it would be messy and hard. I couldn’t believe how easy it was.
using hot water and a window scraping tool that uses razer blades, tough work but seems to work better than any other tools.
good luck
What a lousy job this is!
I’m doing a combination of things on my basement stairs.
I pulled up the tacky carpeting and found some linolium tiles beneath. I couldn’t be so lucky to hit raw wood.
I tried sanding and theat didn’t help. I’m using stripper that roofing guys use to clean tar off their tools. I bought it from a paint store.
I’m brushing it on and using a wide scraper and a narrow one and wiping it down with rags. It’s a slow process, but if you keep re-applying and going back to scaping and wiping it, it’s easy on the hands.
Make sure you have good ventilation of course. Take lots of breaks too! I’m working in it 5 minutes at a time.
Use a Fein Multimaster with a scrapping blade to remove the stubborn pieces.
just put some linoleum over the old stuff, works for me