As part of this job, he was supposed to spray about 20 new solid pine 6
panel doors and 3 sets of solid 6 panel bifold doors I installed. Probably
close to $3,000 in doors, not including my labor to install 'em.
Well, two weeks ago, the crew came in, pulled down the doors (we'd already
stripped the knobs, but left the doors on the hinges), took the doors away
for about a week to spray them, then returned and re-hung them. When I saw
the doors, I was PO'd. Every door had flaws. In some cases, there were
fresh dents and gouges that had been done since the doors were painted. On
other doors, filler had been used after the "final coat". Other doors were
splintered because the painter didn't "break" edges we had pointed out. Some
doors didn't get enough paint, so the paint was transparent. On one very
obvious door in the master bedroom, it is obvious that the sprayer had a
problem, because there is very noticable orange peel. On the closet doors,
the nice brushed nickel hinges were painted white, like the doors. Some
doors had a dozen or more flaws.
We called the painter back and he indicated that he was subbing this job
out, since he was exiting the paint business, but would get his
subcontractor to correct all of the problems. I walked the "prime"
contractor through the house yesterday and we marked the flaws (not all of
'em, just the 50% that were most obvious) with blue painters tape. The
prime contractor met the sub here this morning and the sub's crews did quite
a bit of work today.
Unfortunately instead of pulling the doors down, fixing the flaws, and
respraying, they filled the dents and gouges and brush painted all of the
doors. Quite a few door edges still have not been "broken" by sanding, and
it is obvious that the crew didn't remove hardware when they came back
today, because lots of the doorknobs and hinges have paint on 'em.
Is this situation correctable? Obviously, the hardware can be cleaned and
door edges can be rounded and repainted. The big problem would seem to be
that all of the doors now have brush marks, and I don't think that is
fixable.
Suggestions?
Sadly you need a lot of sand paper.
Sure hope you have not paid them
Time to call your contractor licensing agency and file a claim.
If the situation is as you state they sure are not listening.
<<<snip>>>
>>
>> Suggestions?
>
> Sadly you need a lot of sand paper.
I'm not sure this is a sandable problem. First, I've never had much luck
sanding latex. Second, if you sand the routed panels, they will lose
definition.
> Sure hope you have not paid them
Absolutely not. However, even if I don't pay them a penny, I'm out $3k on
doors plus probably another $3k in labor if I paid someone to install
replacements. Interesting how probably $1500 of work (painting the doors)
can more or less screw up $6k of prior work. Hadn't really considered that
possibility with a painter...
> Time to call your contractor licensing agency and file a claim.
Painters are not a licensed trade here.
> If the situation is as you state they sure are not listening.
Clearly.
But they ARE subject to small-claims courts. Don't threaten. File the claim.
When I bought my house, the kitchen cabinet doors has several layers of
paint. I brought the doors to a place that stripped them using a chemical
steam. No sanding at all. It raised the grain slightly so when I got them
back I had to lightly sand but nothing serious.
Bob
That;s how it works. The OP indicated he did contact the prime who got
the sub to come over and screw it up some more. Clearly the prime is
on the hook. If I had to take them to small claims however, I'd sue
both of them and let the court figure it out.
>>> Time to call your contractor licensing agency and file a claim.
>> Painters are not a licensed trade here.
>
> But they ARE subject to small-claims courts. Don't threaten. File the claim.
>
>
Ditto. Sue them for the cost of buying new doors.