I save the last strip of carpet to wrap the tack strips in. Throw the strips in the carpet and then roll up the carpet, encasing the strips (and all those nasty tacks).
We used a screw driver to get them out. It was a little bit annoying because one of them was magnetized and so all the staples would stick to it and cause extra work.
Being a landlord, I remove the carpet myself to save cost. After it's all clean I paint the floor before the new carpet goes down. It prevents any smells from the last tenant and protects the wood from any pet accidents.
Good call checking what's under the carpet before you go cutting through it. In my new house, we ended up ripping up a bunch of the carpets and discovered that somebody had actually decided to carpet over a bunch of beautiful hardwood floors(!) We pulled all the carpet out, only had to do a slight refinishing on the hardwood, and the floors absolutely gorgeous now. We really lucked out.
I've been in the home improvement - restoration business for about 30 years and I use the same procedure and it's the best way. I do use duct tape for holding the rolls together, but really anything you have handy will work, even box tape. I use a regular utility knife but I'm sure that other type is fine. One thing that was left out and it will save you years of aggravation is take care of any floor squeaks before reinstalling carpet or whatever flooring you're using. Get a box of 2.5 inch torx head deck screws, or really any 2.5 inch wood screws that you have handy, even 2 inch is better than nothing, and go down every floor joist and screw the subfloor down. This will prevent squeaks and will also eliminate existing squeaks and this is the perfect time to do it. You can go around and target the areas that squeak, but I generally go through and just screw everything as if it is a new subfloor. If it was originally installed with screws then you probably won't need to. But most subfloors are put down with nails and they tend to get squeaky when you walk on them after a few years. On the butt joints put a screw about every 4 or 5 inches, and maybe five screws is fine for the places where there is no butt joint, you can do more if you want. A power drill will work but an impact driver is much better for this.
Yesterday I did a search for "best way to cut carpet" (I'm installing hardwood) and this video was the second one suggested. Thank you so much for these tips! They were all spot on fantastic, but the shovel tip is the best. Today I prepped my 16' x 24' living room for the hardwood install - carpet removal, tack board removal, staple removal, all of it, and I was done in three hours. Out of five rooms I've put hardwood flooring in, this room is the biggest and the prep time was shortest. You saved me a bunch of time and a whole bunch of hassle!
Regarding the staples - I don't have a scraper and will certainly consider one next time, but corrugated needle-nose electrician's pliers are absolutely amazing for removing staples. They have the grip and the leverage that put normal pliers to shame.
I learned a trick a long time ago, when you get the carpet rolled up cut a 2" strip half way across the edge, on the top of the roll cut two slits parallel about 6" wide in the middle and then tuck the strip through them, keeps the roll together without tape and makes a handle to carry it outside.
OMGGGGG THANK YOU for the shovel tip!! My back and neck were Killing Me and it was eating up multiple days redoing the fixer upper me and my partner got. But i just got a whole room done in 10 minutes!!! You are a life saver!!
Great video. I also learned a few tricks when they installed my carpet. You can just throw the carpet out the window once you roll it. Also, if you cut partially down the rolled up carpet so that you have a ribbon hanging off and then make two slits along the center, you can just shove the ribbon through the slits so that it stays rolled up.
When I was replacing our carpet last weekend and pulling all those nasty staples I said, I can’t imagine a contractor on his hands and needs prying 200 staples out. Here’s my answer. Great vid!
You have great tips on your videos! You do all these things I do all the time but find some magic tip. I am a painter by trade but a handy man as well. The tape video for balusters… genius. Black line on caulk, spade and floor scraper.. really thanks.
The reason why i do the staples the same time as the pad as an installer is because I can just take a razor scraper and just go under wherever the padding has been stapled down, and just knock them out of the wood nice and easy. it's pretty easy since most of the time you just have staples along the seems, and the corners.
Lol. Use a rubber mallet when hammering tack strips with the trim puller. That metal on metal sound without a carpet in the room just destroys your ears. I removed a few carpets in my home and realized that way down the line. Awesome video. The shovel trick was just..."how did I not think of that!". Too late now haha. Make sure it's not a razor scraper with the staple trick.
Am about to pull up 100m2 of carpet and underlay. Shovel and square edge scrapper it is. Thanks! Excellent tips. I did the manual method in half a room and remember watching this video a while ago. Just rewatched it
Use a shovel to remove tacks AND the nail strip?? ??? Never heard of such a method……. Oh my gosh , Used it and you saved me about an hour of using the pliers, crow bar and a mallet!!!!!! THANK YOU. !!!!!!! Nails and staples came straight out. Best part is that when my wife checked in on me , I was holding a big long shovel so it looked like I was working harder than I actually was.
Wow! Learned something new today. In one room of our 1898 Queen Anne there is 50 year old carpet on top of 100 year old carpet which is on top of a horsehair pad. Talk about yucky! The pad doesn't roll up, I have to pull it off in chunks and bag it. I'll have to be careful with the spade too, as I don't want to damage the oak flooring beneath. But I'm going to give it a try. Thanks for sharing your knowledge.
One room we done had the old carpet and the underlay on top of carpet tiles that were all glued to the hardwood. Luckily none had rotted but it was time consuming
I wish I had seen this video last year. We removed all the carpet from our upstairs bedrooms. The underlay had so many staples in it there was no way we could have rolled it up like you did. I had no idea we could have left the tack strip in place for the new carpet that was going in. Lesson learned.
Great video. Only thing I'd suggest is using a carpet knife instead if you're going to be doing this a lot. They last a lot longer and cut through carpet like it's nothing. I never tried a shovel to remove tack strips, I usually use my long pry bar and essentially do the same thing as the shovel.
Very good video as always. One suggestion that I have found works remarkably well (hence my remark), is the hook blades! Great for shingles, and also amazing for things like carpet. Thanks for your combo of education and humor!
You can also get a hook knife for the multitool... works pretty good once you get it started, but a good old fashioned utility knife still seems to work best.
I've pulled up alot of carpet and I'd reccomend using hook razor blades. They're generally used for roofing, but they cut much easier and don't damage the flooring underneath if it's hardwood.
Would love a tip for tearing tac strip up off cement. I basically pried off the strip and then used nail pullers to rock out every tac strip nail. It was a pain and breaks up the concrete a bit too.
The concrete almost always chips when removing tack strip nails. That's exactly what I do too, and if a nail doesn't come out, I take an angle grinder to it. Be careful not to hit the concrete, it'll be a toxic dusty mess.
Important question: With the staples, what do you when you don’t want to mark up the floor? We renovated much of our house and the owners before us put carpet over very nice pine floors. We decided to take the carpet out and refinish the pine flooring. We ripped up the carpet downstairs and had to take out the staples one by one on our hands and knees… Which was a very long and painful process. We still have staples to take out upstairs and it would be so nice to have an easier way to take them out. Thoughts?
Burn the house down…. But seriously there’s probably not much to do but suffer there! I’d probably have used water pump pliers and a flat putty knife to protect the floor from prying.
About z4 yr ago i had to remove 1600sqfrt of carpet i did the staples 1 by 1 with the claw, now i have some regrets over the hours i could have spent doing something else. Great tips thanks
if you cut a 2" strip of the rolled up carpet halfway down and then a small slice through the next layer you can then wrap that strip around the roll and through that hole. no need to use tape, and you can also carry the rolls by that strip so you don't need to put it over your shoulder and get all the crap down your collar. hard to describe but i had a old timer show me and it's a game changer
Nice simple tips for everyone, like it! Just one modification: having cut a convenient width of carpet, _do not_ roll it as demonstrated, but gently flip it to the side it's not that difficult, and roll it _inwards_ not outwards. The woven top surface of the carpet remains intact and is comfortable to grab hold of and won't leave your clothes impregnated with sh*t, whereas the bottom of a 30 year old carpet has probably turned into black tar-like glue that will crack and fragment everywhere once you start rolling it, and the underlay is the worst substance known to man for flaking into sticky bits impossible to get out of the wallpaper and carpets of the rest of the house as you brush against walls and banisters and tread in the bits. Especially foul is the ancient 35+ year old rubber or extruded man-made gooy foam stuff that sticks to the boards and wants to break into bits. That's when you grab the nice long wide scraper as demonstrated, keep away from the stuff, and scrape it all up and over onto your flipped carpet and remains of underlay, then roll up the whole shebang with "nice clean" (filthy threadbare!) intact carpet on the outside ready for you to manhandle.
My tip... open the window & screen and just toss the rolls out. Don't drag the mess through the house. LOL Those trim pullers are worth their weight in gold. I have the version that has a hinged portion in the middle of its blade (Goldblatt)... love that tool for yanking baseboards, door/window trim, etc. Saves the drywall from getting all banged up.
Watching the "PROS" use the scraper to pop the staples, they only get about half or so, the rest of the staples just get pressed flat into the plywood; and they leave them. So don't roll up the pad, use the scraper with the pad still stapled down. That tiny bit of pad under the staple's crown gives the scraper something to push against and pop the staple instead of plowing it down, and you'll have a lot less to go back and pull by hand to do the job correctly.
Carpet layer here. All that's good except use the scraper to knock loose the tackstrip and fold the carpet over and cut it from the back. Much easier and faster. Cheers.
the scraper is okay for plywood floors for the staples.But if you have hard wood floors it doesnt work that good at all ,the hard wood holds those staples in there.Plus you dont want to be scrapping the floors your going to redo.you also dont want to use the shovel on a hard wood floor either.
I just discovered wood flooring under the 1970s orange carpeting in my Dad's house. Any thoughts on how to not cause damage to the wood flooring underneath?
My water heater blew water all over my house last week and i had to tear out about 600sq ft of carpet. I cut it into about 2ft wide lengths, rolled them up with the pad and set inside contractor waste bags. Tied the bag up and tossed it to the curb. My house is on a wood slab, so I didnt have to worry about staples. The tack strips came off quickly with an Irwin pry bar. Now I got to learn how to lay vinyl plank flooring.
A couple of tips, fold the carpet over and cut from the back, it cuts easier. Use both hands on the knife when possible, so if you slip your second hand is definitely not going to be in the way of the knife
You'll find its easier to cut carpet with the grain which almost always runs with the length of the room. If you do it right you don't cut any carpet at all. The blade goes in between the rows of yarn and all you cut is backing.
Hey man i cut carpet like a robot all day at work into foot wide and 10 feet long strips for wrapping it on wood shaped to hold big pipes. But anyways try when your cutting thebstrip the get one hand on either side of the carpet and pull on it or lift it a little as you glide your hand following the blade. This will put tension on the fibers and make them cut much mich easier and not dull your blade as much due to slack resistance. And the quicker you walk the better. Last thing you want to do is spend alot of time bent over
So I’m removing old baseboard and trim and installing new. The floor is carpeted but I’m getting new carpet in the spring. My question is…. How high should I install the new base board up off the floor so that the new carpet can still tuck under it? Is there an ideal height that is not to high or too low? The new carpet is probably going to be a medium pile and I will probably be keeping the existing tack strip as long as it’s in good condition. Thanks in advance for any tips/info you can provide!!!
I saw a guy take a 'T' shape multi-tool blade and ground the back edge into a hook, that he then sharpened the edge of. He said it was good for cutting carpet. No demonstration, and I haven't tried it, but it sound like it has potential. I've been cutting my carpet into 1-foot strips so it will fit in my garbage can.
I tried a few multi tool blades designed to cut carpets when I was trying out a few things for this video. I wasn't that impressed, not as quick as a sharp knife and didn't do a good job cutting all the way through the underlay.
For more than thirty years I owned multfamily housing. I have ripped up a lot of carpet. I think I am going to find out that I could have done it a lot faster if I had know what is in this video. We'll see. Pulling the carpet out: Little or no improvement. I liked rolling it into as big a roll as I could handle. I might have even been faster. Pulling out the tack strip: Big improvement. Using the shovel looked great to me. Pulling out the staples: I'm not sure now, but I think I did it sort of like that. I used a heavy floor scraper.
with both you justc grab and pull. carpet will come out with a good tug and bring all the carpet grips with it. maybe its a rough approach but its what ive always done and its all over in ten mins.
I used the spade shovel trick today. Works great! Now, the scraper... that's almost a $50 tool. No longer on amazon. Do you have any other link to buy?
Wuss - two hands. smh but on a serious note wouldn't have thought of a shovel for the tack strip - adding to my mental tips for next time. Last time I did it, it was painful.... tho it was into concrete. Looking forward to a SLC video in the near future - mapei or sika125 - oh the suspense!
Sadly I have beige carpet throughout the apartment - ha! But it is laid on a concrete slab. The baseboards will need repair and painting then new carpet laid - any suggestions as to how I should approach this project.
It’s a lot easier to cut burbour carpet with the grain instead of against it, as you did. Also, you can get rid of those staples in seconds with a belt sander.
Ah damn! I’m getting that spade shovel tip about a month late!! Ah well, C’est la vie, I didn’t throw my back out with my pry bar so if to that going for me
I had a lot of carpet to remove and I bought a set of electric rotary shears on Amazon. I think they were 40 bucks and they go through carpet like butter.
my kitchen has really disgusting carpet that im trying to remove. I pulled a corner up and it looks like cement underneath. How do I keep the concrete from pulling up with the carpet? TiA
I wish I did it that way 😂 I still have the strips to do though so that's useful. Carpet is so nasty. Why would you want it when you could glide through cleaning with a giant industrial broom thing on a hard floor anyway? 💡
as a carpet fitter of 40 years i used to use a spade but I couldn't help but notice how car the gripper had been fitted from the skirting lol how the hell can you get a nice tight tuck with that,
I save the last strip of carpet to wrap the tack strips in. Throw the strips in the carpet and then roll up the carpet, encasing the strips (and all those nasty tacks).
That's a great tip
My 12 year old is the best tool ever for pulling carpet strips and staples!
We used a screw driver to get them out. It was a little bit annoying because one of them was magnetized and so all the staples would stick to it and cause extra work.
That's called torture.😂😂😂😂
Teaching him good job 👏🏽 keep it up
whoa, the shovel idea is genius!
This couldn't have come at a better time for me. The wife wants the whole house done in LVP and the carpet gone. You're doing the lord's work lol
Best wishes on the project!
Being a landlord, I remove the carpet myself to save cost. After it's all clean I paint the floor before the new carpet goes down. It prevents any smells from the last tenant and protects the wood from any pet accidents.
They thought had actually crossed my mind lol. Getting ready to remodel for my next tenant. Thx
What a great idea!!!
Wow, thanks for that tip.
Genius move! 👍👍
It's a great way to use up old paint. Those old random colors can just mix together and not worry about the color it becomes.
Good call checking what's under the carpet before you go cutting through it. In my new house, we ended up ripping up a bunch of the carpets and discovered that somebody had actually decided to carpet over a bunch of beautiful hardwood floors(!) We pulled all the carpet out, only had to do a slight refinishing on the hardwood, and the floors absolutely gorgeous now. We really lucked out.
Lucky you!!!!!!
Even though KNEW it was a fake finger, I physically winced every time you took a swipe at it!😆
I've been in the home improvement - restoration business for about 30 years and I use the same procedure and it's the best way. I do use duct tape for holding the rolls together, but really anything you have handy will work, even box tape.
I use a regular utility knife but I'm sure that other type is fine.
One thing that was left out and it will save you years of aggravation is take care of any floor squeaks before reinstalling carpet or whatever flooring you're using.
Get a box of 2.5 inch torx head deck screws, or really any 2.5 inch wood screws that you have handy, even 2 inch is better than nothing, and go down every floor joist and screw the subfloor down.
This will prevent squeaks and will also eliminate existing squeaks and this is the perfect time to do it. You can go around and target the areas that squeak, but I generally go through and just screw everything as if it is a new subfloor.
If it was originally installed with screws then you probably won't need to. But most subfloors are put down with nails and they tend to get squeaky when you walk on them after a few years. On the butt joints put a screw about every 4 or 5 inches, and maybe five screws is fine for the places where there is no butt joint, you can do more if you want. A power drill will work but an impact driver is much better for this.
Yesterday I did a search for "best way to cut carpet" (I'm installing hardwood) and this video was the second one suggested. Thank you so much for these tips! They were all spot on fantastic, but the shovel tip is the best. Today I prepped my 16' x 24' living room for the hardwood install - carpet removal, tack board removal, staple removal, all of it, and I was done in three hours. Out of five rooms I've put hardwood flooring in, this room is the biggest and the prep time was shortest. You saved me a bunch of time and a whole bunch of hassle!
Happy the tips helped🍻
Regarding the staples - I don't have a scraper and will certainly consider one next time, but corrugated needle-nose electrician's pliers are absolutely amazing for removing staples. They have the grip and the leverage that put normal pliers to shame.
I learned a trick a long time ago, when you get the carpet rolled up cut a 2" strip half way across the edge, on the top of the roll cut two slits parallel about 6" wide in the middle and then tuck the strip through them, keeps the roll together without tape and makes a handle to carry it outside.
Cool trick
Save a piece of carpet or padding to roll the tack strips up in. You’ll bleed less!
Excellent tip
😂
OMGGGGG THANK YOU for the shovel tip!! My back and neck were Killing Me and it was eating up multiple days redoing the fixer upper me and my partner got. But i just got a whole room done in 10 minutes!!! You are a life saver!!
Great video. I also learned a few tricks when they installed my carpet. You can just throw the carpet out the window once you roll it. Also, if you cut partially down the rolled up carpet so that you have a ribbon hanging off and then make two slits along the center, you can just shove the ribbon through the slits so that it stays rolled up.
The window chuck is magical when it works out!
When I was replacing our carpet last weekend and pulling all those nasty staples I said, I can’t imagine a contractor on his hands and needs prying 200 staples out. Here’s my answer. Great vid!
I worked with a guy who's brother got him into the carpenters local. They gave him floor work, he quit after 2 days. 😂
Great Video! Just did this to my carpeting and yes, wish I had used the shovel trick! Great points all around! Thanks!👍
You have great tips on your videos! You do all these things I do all the time but find some magic tip. I am a painter by trade but a handy man as well. The tape video for balusters… genius. Black line on caulk, spade and floor scraper.. really thanks.
Happy to help Mario, thanks for watching!
The reason why i do the staples the same time as the pad as an installer is because I can just take a razor scraper and just go under wherever the padding has been stapled down, and just knock them out of the wood nice and easy. it's pretty easy since most of the time you just have staples along the seems, and the corners.
Having done carpet demo myself I wish I had known these tips first! Great tips!
U, are the greatest dude, who saved a lot of dudes, all over the planet. 😮
And this lady too who has to do carpet removal herself!
Thanks for the great video, at the end I really liked the bonus tip to get rid of those pesky pointer fingers!
Lol. Use a rubber mallet when hammering tack strips with the trim puller. That metal on metal sound without a carpet in the room just destroys your ears. I removed a few carpets in my home and realized that way down the line. Awesome video. The shovel trick was just..."how did I not think of that!". Too late now haha. Make sure it's not a razor scraper with the staple trick.
Loved the shovel trick!
Am about to pull up 100m2 of carpet and underlay. Shovel and square edge scrapper it is. Thanks! Excellent tips. I did the manual method in half a room and remember watching this video a while ago. Just rewatched it
This is amazing!! I’ve removed all those nails really fast and easy with the spade shovel! Thanks!!
Fantastic!
Use a shovel to remove tacks AND the nail strip?? ??? Never heard of such a method…….
Oh my gosh , Used it and you saved me about an hour of using the pliers, crow bar and a mallet!!!!!! THANK YOU. !!!!!!! Nails and staples came straight out.
Best part is that when my wife checked in on me , I was holding a big long shovel so it looked like I was working harder than I actually was.
How about using a garden hoe? You have a fulcrum, leverage.
Wow! Learned something new today. In one room of our 1898 Queen Anne there is 50 year old carpet on top of 100 year old carpet which is on top of a horsehair pad. Talk about yucky! The pad doesn't roll up, I have to pull it off in chunks and bag it. I'll have to be careful with the spade too, as I don't want to damage the oak flooring beneath. But I'm going to give it a try. Thanks for sharing your knowledge.
One room we done had the old carpet and the underlay on top of carpet tiles that were all glued to the hardwood. Luckily none had rotted but it was time consuming
I wish I had seen this video last year. We removed all the carpet from our upstairs bedrooms. The underlay had so many staples in it there was no way we could have rolled it up like you did. I had no idea we could have left the tack strip in place for the new carpet that was going in. Lesson learned.
Hopefully there won't be a next time, but if there is!
Great video. Only thing I'd suggest is using a carpet knife instead if you're going to be doing this a lot. They last a lot longer and cut through carpet like it's nothing. I never tried a shovel to remove tack strips, I usually use my long pry bar and essentially do the same thing as the shovel.
Best Funny Carpenter on TH-cam! Keep up the good work! Seriously, thanks for all the awesome vids, super informative and well done.
Very good video as always. One suggestion that I have found works remarkably well (hence my remark), is the hook blades! Great for shingles, and also amazing for things like carpet.
Thanks for your combo of education and humor!
I think I’m going to make a quick video next week about the fastest way to cut carpet! I’ve ordered the hook blades, they’re in the challenge.
Nice. Another benefit to them is they only cut the layer you want, and not the layer beneath.
Looking forward to the next one!
You can also get a hook knife for the multitool... works pretty good once you get it started, but a good old fashioned utility knife still seems to work best.
I've pulled up alot of carpet and I'd reccomend using hook razor blades. They're generally used for roofing, but they cut much easier and don't damage the flooring underneath if it's hardwood.
Would love a tip for tearing tac strip up off cement. I basically pried off the strip and then used nail pullers to rock out every tac strip nail. It was a pain and breaks up the concrete a bit too.
The concrete almost always chips when removing tack strip nails. That's exactly what I do too, and if a nail doesn't come out, I take an angle grinder to it. Be careful not to hit the concrete, it'll be a toxic dusty mess.
Important question: With the staples, what do you when you don’t want to mark up the floor?
We renovated much of our house and the owners before us put carpet over very nice pine floors. We decided to take the carpet out and refinish the pine flooring. We ripped up the carpet downstairs and had to take out the staples one by one on our hands and knees… Which was a very long and painful process. We still have staples to take out upstairs and it would be so nice to have an easier way to take them out.
Thoughts?
Burn the house down…. But seriously there’s probably not much to do but suffer there! I’d probably have used water pump pliers and a flat putty knife to protect the floor from prying.
@@TheFunnyCarpenter 😂 That’s how I felt the first time around!!
Thanks! I’ll give that a try!
I’m on a cement slab. Taking up carpet would be pulling that tacking edge out of cement right?
Yes
Are you able to use the scraper for the staples if you have hardwood floors under the carpet you intend to refinish?
Thanks!!!! I used the shovel and worked so well!!!
Useful advice. Thank you for sharing.
About z4 yr ago i had to remove 1600sqfrt of carpet i did the staples 1 by 1 with the claw, now i have some regrets over the hours i could have spent doing something else.
Great tips thanks
if you cut a 2" strip of the rolled up carpet halfway down and then a small slice through the next layer you can then wrap that strip around the roll and through that hole. no need to use tape, and you can also carry the rolls by that strip so you don't need to put it over your shoulder and get all the crap down your collar. hard to describe but i had a old timer show me and it's a game changer
Nice simple tips for everyone, like it! Just one modification: having cut a convenient width of carpet, _do not_ roll it as demonstrated, but gently flip it to the side it's not that difficult, and roll it _inwards_ not outwards. The woven top surface of the carpet remains intact and is comfortable to grab hold of and won't leave your clothes impregnated with sh*t, whereas the bottom of a 30 year old carpet has probably turned into black tar-like glue that will crack and fragment everywhere once you start rolling it, and the underlay is the worst substance known to man for flaking into sticky bits impossible to get out of the wallpaper and carpets of the rest of the house as you brush against walls and banisters and tread in the bits. Especially foul is the ancient 35+ year old rubber or extruded man-made gooy foam stuff that sticks to the boards and wants to break into bits. That's when you grab the nice long wide scraper as demonstrated, keep away from the stuff, and scrape it all up and over onto your flipped carpet and remains of underlay, then roll up the whole shebang with "nice clean" (filthy threadbare!) intact carpet on the outside ready for you to manhandle.
This video was so helpful thank you so much 💚
My tip... open the window & screen and just toss the rolls out. Don't drag the mess through the house. LOL
Those trim pullers are worth their weight in gold. I have the version that has a hinged portion in the middle of its blade (Goldblatt)... love that tool for yanking baseboards, door/window trim, etc. Saves the drywall from getting all banged up.
Watching the "PROS" use the scraper to pop the staples, they only get about half or so, the rest of the staples just get pressed flat into the plywood; and they leave them. So don't roll up the pad, use the scraper with the pad still stapled down. That tiny bit of pad under the staple's crown gives the scraper something to push against and pop the staple instead of plowing it down, and you'll have a lot less to go back and pull by hand to do the job correctly.
Carpet layer here.
All that's good except use the scraper to knock loose the tackstrip and fold the carpet over and cut it from the back. Much easier and faster.
Cheers.
Very good video: informative and funny. Thank you!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Rocket surgery 😆😂🤣, outstanding tips!!!
classic construction slang:)
The end was brilliant. Thank you sir
the scraper is okay for plywood floors for the staples.But if you have hard wood floors it doesnt work that good at all ,the hard wood holds those staples in there.Plus you dont want to be scrapping the floors your going to redo.you also dont want to use the shovel on a hard wood floor either.
One of those tools for removing shingles from roofs actually works pretty well for the tack strip as well.
I just discovered wood flooring under the 1970s orange carpeting in my Dad's house.
Any thoughts on how to not cause damage to the wood flooring underneath?
Really appreciate the way you explain things. Thanks for sharing this!
Thank you for saving me three days of hassle!
My water heater blew water all over my house last week and i had to tear out about 600sq ft of carpet. I cut it into about 2ft wide lengths, rolled them up with the pad and set inside contractor waste bags. Tied the bag up and tossed it to the curb. My house is on a wood slab, so I didnt have to worry about staples. The tack strips came off quickly with an Irwin pry bar.
Now I got to learn how to lay vinyl plank flooring.
A couple of tips, fold the carpet over and cut from the back, it cuts easier. Use both hands on the knife when possible, so if you slip your second hand is definitely not going to be in the way of the knife
You'll find its easier to cut carpet with the grain which almost always runs with the length of the room. If you do it right you don't cut any carpet at all. The blade goes in between the rows of yarn and all you cut is backing.
Hey man i cut carpet like a robot all day at work into foot wide and 10 feet long strips for wrapping it on wood shaped to hold big pipes. But anyways try when your cutting thebstrip the get one hand on either side of the carpet and pull on it or lift it a little as you glide your hand following the blade. This will put tension on the fibers and make them cut much mich easier and not dull your blade as much due to slack resistance. And the quicker you walk the better. Last thing you want to do is spend alot of time bent over
So I use a rotor hammer and a shovel bit for both these jobs. Ten times faster and far less labor. Works super well on concrete as well. Try it.
Yeah, I caught the "rocket surgery" throwaway. Good one.
Never go full rocket surgeon Pete!
Amazingggggg, I owe you a lot of time. That shovel trick killllled it. Thank you
So I’m removing old baseboard and trim and installing new. The floor is carpeted but I’m getting new carpet in the spring. My question is…. How high should I install the new base board up off the floor so that the new carpet can still tuck under it? Is there an ideal height that is not to high or too low? The new carpet is probably going to be a medium pile and I will probably be keeping the existing tack strip as long as it’s in good condition. Thanks in advance for any tips/info you can provide!!!
I saw a guy take a 'T' shape multi-tool blade and ground the back edge into a hook, that he then sharpened the edge of. He said it was good for cutting carpet. No demonstration, and I haven't tried it, but it sound like it has potential. I've been cutting my carpet into 1-foot strips so it will fit in my garbage can.
I tried a few multi tool blades designed to cut carpets when I was trying out a few things for this video. I wasn't that impressed, not as quick as a sharp knife and didn't do a good job cutting all the way through the underlay.
quote of the day at minute five..."it's not rocket surgery".
😂 LOL
Should I leave the carpet strips for the new carpet or remove them.
I’d leave them if they are in decent shape
For more than thirty years I owned multfamily housing. I have ripped up a lot of carpet. I think I am going to find out that I could have done it a lot faster if I had know what is in this video. We'll see.
Pulling the carpet out: Little or no improvement. I liked rolling it into as big a roll as I could handle. I might have even been faster.
Pulling out the tack strip: Big improvement. Using the shovel looked great to me.
Pulling out the staples: I'm not sure now, but I think I did it sort of like that. I used a heavy floor scraper.
Great tip with the tape on the rolls!!!
All I can say is Thank you!!!🙏🏾
a carpet hook for the multi tool is the only way to cut carpet! like butter, so fast!
I tried out a few of them for this carpet, no dice. The knife was much faster and better in terms of cutting the underlay.
with both you justc grab and pull. carpet will come out with a good tug and bring all the carpet grips with it. maybe its a rough approach but its what ive always done and its all over in ten mins.
I used the spade shovel trick today. Works great! Now, the scraper... that's almost a $50 tool. No longer on amazon. Do you have any other link to buy?
I wonder if a flipped over older style dirt rake would work any good.
Getting ready to tackle this and …..The shovel technique mighta just saved my back
Best hack ever!!!!! Thanks 🤩🤩
Wuss - two hands. smh but on a serious note wouldn't have thought of a shovel for the tack strip - adding to my mental tips for next time. Last time I did it, it was painful.... tho it was into concrete. Looking forward to a SLC video in the near future - mapei or sika125 - oh the suspense!
Sadly I have beige carpet throughout the apartment - ha! But it is laid on a concrete slab. The baseboards will need repair and painting then new carpet laid - any suggestions as to how I should approach this project.
Tell us about those Saucony shoes!
Peregrine Trail shoes. Pretty much all I wear, you never know when a run might break out
can you take a video of how to peel up copper tax strips on a plywood in subfloor please at micro on 1338 Margaret Rd. please?
would you do this on nice hardwood?
They make an actual spade for this on a pole but the shovel works just as well.
It’s a lot easier to cut burbour carpet with the grain instead of against it, as you did. Also, you can get rid of those staples in seconds with a belt sander.
Spade shovel was 👌🏼
What tape do you use to wrap the carpet please? Thanks
It looked like he used painters tape, but I prefer duct tape, it’s much stronger.
@@leeb.7188 Thanks
Ah damn! I’m getting that spade shovel tip about a month late!! Ah well, C’est la vie, I didn’t throw my back out with my pry bar so if to that going for me
Is the Zenith tool safe to use on hardwood floors?
I had a lot of carpet to remove and I bought a set of electric rotary shears on Amazon. I think they were 40 bucks and they go through carpet like butter.
Great video!!! Thanks 🙏
First of all this was very helpful thank you!
Second of all “rocket surgery” is very Michael Scott 😂
my kitchen has really disgusting carpet that im trying to remove. I pulled a corner up and it looks like cement underneath. How do I keep the concrete from pulling up with the carpet? TiA
You’re pretty good actually.
“It’s not rocket surgery.” I’m gonna use this gem many times in the future!🤣🤣
I wish I did it that way 😂 I still have the strips to do though so that's useful.
Carpet is so nasty. Why would you want it when you could glide through cleaning with a giant industrial broom thing on a hard floor anyway? 💡
Thank you, Funny Carpenter.
I skipped through this video a bit and didn’t hear the part where he said fake finger. I freaked out for a second at the end there 😂😂
i was like dang.. dont have that.. imma try a shovel. Then BOOM! You bring out the shovel. Now you're talking my language :D 3:55
"rocket surgery" LOL!!!
It's also a great chance to screw in the squeaky plywood
My previous homeowner used hundreds of staples to attach the rug, and then did it again with the padding.
The floor scraper you recommend is no longer available based on your link
Thank you for a great tutorial and the funny thing is my Carpet is also 17 years old which I am having replaced LOL
as a carpet fitter of 40 years i used to use a spade but I couldn't help but notice how car the gripper had been fitted from the skirting lol how the hell can you get a nice tight tuck with that,
Try that when the tac strip is done on concrete.