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New: wanting to clean up a kenmore tool chest for my husband.

GreenDIY

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I found a tool chest/cabinet/what do you call it? On Craigslist for my husband. I am buying him a new storage thing that looks like a dresser (HELLO can you tell I'm new!) in black. I would like clean up the old one that is black and red so they look nice together. Is there a thread somewhere on the basics of cleaning up an old box?
Any direction would be helpful! Thanks :)
 
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thebeekeeper1

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Welcome to the site! [wave]

I start with a hot sunny day and a power washer. After it's thoroughly dry, examine to determine areas of concern (rust mostly), then surface prep and paint. Is that what you had in mind? BTW, your husband is obviously a lucky man! :bowdown:
 

zkling

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Welcome to GJ :beer:

Can you post a picture of the tool box? I could not find any "kenmore" tool boxes on google.

What needs to be cleaned off of it? Is it just greasy dirt and grime? Or does it have rust and paint over spray?

My favorite for cleaning grease is dawn dish soap and a hot or cold pressure washer. Dawn is great for cutting the grease and not being too hard on the paint. If it's good enough for the baby ducks it is good enough for me.
 

kursplat

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wonder if kenmore = sears = craftsman? pics would be great, i would assume the dresser thing is metal but you don't want to start spray washing it if it's wood :lol:

is this a suprise?
 

srmofo

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I bet she means kennedy which could possibly be a wood machinist chest...that looks like a small dresser?

Or it could be a metal kennedy chest as well.

Pics would be a great help.
 
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GreenDIY

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Ok this is the only photo I could get to load. I will try again later to see if I can get more.
 
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GreenDIY

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Trying again, I can't see the photo I uploaded.
 

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GreenDIY

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The top piece with the drawers is removable.

This photo is the one I am buying for him.
 

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GreenDIY

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Welcome to the site! [wave]

I start with a hot sunny day and a power washer. After it's thoroughly dry, examine to determine areas of concern (rust mostly), then surface prep and paint. Is that what you had in mind? BTW, your husband is obviously a lucky man! :bowdown:

By prep do you mean primer like you would for wood or walls? And would I use like a rustoleum spray paint?
 

nine4gmc

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Post the new one when you can. For the red/bllack one, remove all the tools and put them in boxes for him to sort through, he needs to decide what goes back in and where, now that he'll have two boxes. Light pressure washing or just a hose and bucket of suds to clean it up. If you plan on painting, I would remove all the drawers too. There are several threads on removing drawers, there are different style clips that retain the sliders but all come out easily. A lot of us use Rustoleum rattle cans, please don't use "house paint" :lol:

any questions, just ask.
 
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skulldrinker

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When he gets that new one he won't want that old one. I wouldn't.

edited; When i say I wouldn't I mean that I wouldn't throw it away but I would pass it down to a young kid for his first box. I have a box like that I'm saving for my grandson. I put a tool in it time to time for him. I got a while to fill it up cause he's only 4 still.
 
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bobemmerich

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The top piece with the drawers is removable.

This photo is the one I am buying for him.

I have that box. It's a good unit. It's a Husky, but made by Waterloo. Holds a decent amount of stuff.
On an off-note: he's lucky-
1) You're buying him a box:thumbup:
2) You're on GJ asking questions:beer:
 
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GreenDIY

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So i knew house paint was for houses :thumbup:
i just wanted to know if "prep" included priming. I imagine rustoleum makes primer.
I see what you mean about him not wanting it but NO he won't get rid of it until he cant finf something to put in it! :lol:
 

crewchief888

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buying a new tool box for hubby,
and gonna refurbed his old one as well.

i'm surprised nobody has asked already,

do ya have a sister? :evil:


:lol_hitti

welcome to GJ btw :thumbup:


:beer:
 

nine4gmc

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LOL^

(1) disassemble
(2) clean and degrease
(3) remove all rust by sanding, blasting or grinding
(4) prime all bare metal surfaces
(5) scuff the primer and remaining painted surfaces with scotch pad
(6) light coat of new paint, let dry then two heavier coats with a tack time between

I'd also like to add, if things don't work out between y'all, I'm single :lol:
 

Outlawmws

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Wow, they are circling already! :lol:

Back on topic, What nine4 said, and when in doubt, read the directions on the can of Rustoleum. (I use mostly rustoleum with good results) the "Vintage toolboxes of GJ" is a good thread to peruse for ideas and how-to's for older boxes. I have one in there I restored from near death. (including spot-welding a broken drawer...)
 

evintho

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Well, I may catch flak for this but it sounds to me like you just wanna clean the boxes up so they work well and look nice for your husband. Besides, I'm sure his main box is gonna be the Husky. Contrary to some of the responses given, I don't believe any sandblasting/grinding/welding is going to be required!

So, in answer to your question on the basics of cleaning up an old box, I'd say;

Go ahead and remove the 2 drawers. It looks like a Kennedy, Craftsman or an off brand box. Therefore, I'll bet the slides are the type in my pic. See the little red tab in the oval? That tab catches on the triangular indentation in front of it. That allows the drawer to open but not fall out. Use a flat blade screwdriver and push that red tab in. That will allow it to slide past the indentation. Do that to both sides and the drawer should slide all the way out.



Once the drawers are out, grab a bottle of Simple Green, a bunch of rags and start scrubbing and scouring inside, outside and every nook and cranny until it's squeaky clean. If it really needs paint, go get a couple of red Scotchbrite pads and scuff all painted surfaces. Get into every corner 'cause if you don't, the paint won't stick. Dampen a rag with the Simple Green (boy, I'm gonna hear about this) and wipe the surfaces down. Now carefully mask off anything you don't want painted.....latches/handles/lock/etc. Get a couple of cans of your Rustoleum (I prefer Krylon), shake them well and paint away.

If the chrome has any rust, a quick hit with some fine steel wool should do the trick. Find some drawer liner material, cut to fit and install it in the drawers. Add a bit of lube to the slides, reinstall the drawers and you're golden!

Now, stand back and admire your work!
I'm sure your husband will be blown away!!
 

nine4gmc

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and don't forget to bend the tabs back on the drawers after reinstalling them, you don't want him to pull a drawer full of tools all the way out on accident.
 

thebeekeeper1

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By prep do you mean primer like you would for wood or walls? And would I use like a rustoleum spray paint?

No--"prep" in this case means to sand or sand blast to remove rust and scratches, etc. Once the surface is nice and smooth, then you prime with appropriate primer. :)
 

thebeekeeper1

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By prep do you mean primer like you would for wood or walls? And would I use like a rustoleum spray paint?

So i knew house paint was for houses :thumbup:
i just wanted to know if "prep" included priming. I imagine rustoleum makes primer.
I see what you mean about him not wanting it but NO he won't get rid of it until he cant finf something to put in it! :lol:

Rustoleum makes "Clean Metal Primer" and "Rusty Metal Primer."

Any rust that cannot be removed at least needs to be scraped/sanded to remove any loose flakes. Then prime, then apply finish coat. :)
 

Skyline

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Welcome to the site! [wave]

I start with a hot sunny day and a power washer. After it's thoroughly dry, examine to determine areas of concern (rust mostly), then surface prep and paint. Is that what you had in mind? BTW, your husband is obviously a lucky man! :bowdown:

I would NEVER use water to clean a toolbox. You could ruin it. There are folds of metal with plenty of holes where water can get in, and not get out too easily. Inside those folds is often unpainted or un-powder coated metal. The slides can also rust. Basically, one good bath could completely ruin any toolbox.

I recently bought a tool collection from a fellow who had a massive Macsimizer triple bank with top box and two lockers. He had been out of work for 18 months, and the box did not fit in his one car garage. So he left it in his yard covered in two layers of plastic. It had rust coming from every seam. $20k toolbox ruined. He offered it to me for $2k and I passed; I didn't think anyone would want it. It just goes to show how little moisture it takes to ruin a toolbox. This may not apply to a cheap little box with no multiple layers of steel, but it certainly does for any good box.
 
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