Now - when using Bondo - you have the luan for mixing - get another piece of luan big enough to completely cover the hole. Then, after applying the bondo to fill, cover it with the piece of luan and have WAX PAPER on the luan that comes in contact with the Bondo. Hold the luan/wax paper firmly against the surface - or you can use a staple gun to hold it in place around the perimeter (the holes are easy enough to spackle over later) When the Bondo heats up and firms up - after maybe ten minutes - remove the luan and peel off the wax paper - you will a GLASS SMOOTH surface on the Bondo!!! After it cures within an hour - you can sand it gently with 80 grit if needed. Of course spot sparkle if needed!! (35 yr handyman Northern California)
I watched the entire video without even having a broken door. I'm a handyman and I love to see new ideas! Having used all of these materials, I thought it was a brilliant idea. People complaining about the steps and wanting to buy a new door.. Sometimes $100 is out of reach and 3 days/$38 is all you have. Plus, making a repair that gets the job done is more satisfying than replacing the whole problem! Cheers!
Great idea. Here are some important points that were glossed over. Cut the foam with a knife once it dries as it makes it easier and gives you a more precise cut. Thoroughly read the directions on the BONDO can. You have a limited time to work with bondo. The more hardener you add to bondo above the suggested amount in the mix directions the faster it sets. Bondo sets in a few minutes but goes through a heat while doing so and becomes unworkable slightly before it sets. It will start to clump and it has a slight odor. So if you are sensitive to chemical smells take the door outside.
This is a good way to make the repair. However, I manage apartment complexes and the amount if time this takes does not beat buying a new door. They're roughly about $30 so while it isn't cost effective for my purposes I still see the value in this work. Cheers.
You can’t get a 6 panel door with hinges and holes cut to match professionally for less than $70-80 at best. And property managers usually hire someone to install and then paint it. The average 6 panel door replacement is roughly $130-160. Even for a rental. Having someone do a decent patch and paint like this video is where you get a diy $25 fix or a handyman $60 repair special out of the tenants security deposit. So saying this guy isn’t helping or cost effective is ridiculous
Hey I see you manage apartments and I have a question! My puppy chewed a hole in my door frame can I fix it myself or should I just lose my $1000 deposit? She also chewed a hole in my bathroom sink cabnet & I don’t think that’s fixable. For reference she’s a Pit Bull with separation anxiety that’s why she’s chewing on wood
I had a hole in a door that I repaired this way and it worked well; however, the spray foam unexpectedly expanded a bit more over the course of a couple of weeks and pushed out the repair I'd made. Not really a huge deal, as I simply sanded it down again and renewed the repair. With that said, it was a bit of an irritation, but it was still easier and cheaper for me than replacing the door.
Use a nail polish remover or acetone on the blade. It will help remove the foam easily. Beware not to over use the acetone as it will eat away at the foam. Just enough on the blade to easily cut through
Hello. I had some rust holes on my S-10 pickup. Cheaned the area with only a wire brush, then just filled the void with spray foam. Let it dry, took a steak knife and sawed off the unneeded part. Sanded the area almost flat, and added 2 coats of bondo ontop. Sanded till I got my desired affect. I can kisk the area as hard as I want, and the area's bodo didn't even budge. The heck with patching the area, from now on, spray foam is my #1 go to body work, home repair best friend. BullyBilly, Colorado.
You can save some time on the two extra coats of Bondo by just going heavy enough above flush and start shaving it down with a heavy rasp or grater, in just a couple of minutes, before it gets hard. You have to work fast though, or it will be as hard as a rock in five minutes. You must get in to flush in less than five minutes and then just finish with 80 then 120 grit to smooth it.
yes, hoping to add a little more structure under the bondo and help contain the foam. Sorry about the music edit, I have subtitles now if you want to turn down the volume
I have a bunch of properties and we are left with a ton of holes in doors as well. One of my friends is a carpenter and he helps me do repairs to our properties. We use spray foam to fill in the majority of the holes, and then go over them with wood putty. It doesn't shrink like drywall mud. If I can't find the wood putty I will definitely consider Bondo. Thanks !
Thank you. My daughter has autism. She’s outgrown her violent meltdown stages. We have holes kicked in almost every door in our house. Replacing them isn’t feasible. Doors aren’t expensive but labor is for that many. I think I can fix most of them with this technique. I’ve already patched several large holes in walls with drywall pieces. This really encourages me. I can do this. It can only be an improvement.
Hi Julie, thanks for watching. You got this. Also, take a look at this door repair video that adds the wood grain th-cam.com/video/lVa08pK0mT4/w-d-xo.html
Thanks. Everyone else is talking about how cheap it is to buy new doors, yeah…forgetting that some of us will have to pay someone to come and fit them. I’d rather buy these items for £40 and repair the hole in the door.
Well, no need to listen to all these peeps saying a new door installation is easier. I have a 79" by 29" door and frankly would rather do this patch method rather than resize a 80 by 30 and chisel hinge holes with absolutely no equipment. Thanks!
Great job just finished mines cuz the company dosent want to spend the money so I put the room back in order to make money appreciate the hack bruh💪🏼💯🙌🏼
you could put painters tape or aluminum tape over the hole on the door then cut a hole in the tape and spray the foam in. And use a lower expanding foam would work the best if anyone else is thinking of doing this.👍 A fiberglass filer would be a little bit more durable then bondo but great video
Nice tutorial. As inexpensive as those doors are, in my opinion, I just bought a new door and save the Bondo for something more substantial that needs repaired. Thank you again for the video.
For the money invested and the time, buy new 6 panel and router new hinges. 2nd choice is to buy just the slab and cut one panel out on its natural body line where it goes into like an ogee edge. Cut the damage door panel off, but leave 1/2in reveal after the ogee edge. Put glue on the 1/2inch reveal and place the repair panel on top of the revealed edge. Tape it in place for an hour. This method saves hanging the slab.
I used your how to guide to fix some rotted window sills for a customer of mine rather than replacing the whole frame and brick mold. Your technique is greatly appreciated. I wish I had guys like you working for me.
don't worry about the wood grain that's no longer embossed into that door section. A new hollow core door made to fit that frame by a door shop would run about $100, or you can spend $6 on spray foam, $15 on bondo, $8 on sand paper and about 3 hours your time making a repair that will crack out later. This might be good for very small repairs if a person has all the materials and tools already.
You forgot the most important part. This project took about three days. Overnight setup for the foam, then bongo setup time then sanding and painting and drying times. If this job was for a remote location, the multiple trips would be looser project. Time is money, even if the job was not remote.
Thanks for the video. This suits somebody who's trying to fix it by themselves. If you want to hire someone, better get a new door to save the labour cost.
James, if you hire someone, you will pay for the labor. This is for painters, handymen, and homeowners. I know most carpenters refuse to paint, not all, but most.
Sorry about that, camera guy did not show up on time. Try this door repair with all the steps try this door repair without the loud music th-cam.com/video/lVa08pK0mT4/w-d-xo.html
Good idea filling the hole with the foam. I have tenants that leave me holes in doors all too often! In the past I have used drywall mud to fill caved in sections and so far that works as well as the bondo seems to.
Thank you! I’m having a tough time finding a door in my width because it is unique. This is a lifesaver. Would love to see the details of the sanding steps between bonding and primer and the music was a little distraction. Thank you for the great video!
A spray bottle with water and a light mist on the foam will make it kick off in minutes vs. waiting overnight. We used to do doors more or less how you’ve shown here but then we figured out five minute Dura bond was way faster and in about 30 minutes you could have the thing completely done.
Hi Ryan, yes, I have tried durabond on smaller projects and believe it held up. Bondo will actually dry enough in 10 minutes for another application. I just had a lot of projects in that house and bounced around for a few days on the various projects. Time on this door totaled 1 hour. Thanks for the spray bottle tip.
Having several rental properties I’ve had my share of broken doors. I have a cabinet shop and make all or most repairs myself. This is a good working idea but time and material cost, these doors are cheap and better in the long run to just replace the door. If the tenant breaks the door through neglect or anger, they pay for the door. Accidents happen but property damage through anger isn’t tolerated.
@@douglashill7059 I like this idea and totally support it. I would use it with doors I can no longer match. I thank you for posting it. It’s just for me to get in and out and move on to the next problem it would just be faster time and cost wise to replace the door. I have 42 units to keep up. At 67, thinking of turning it over to my kids soon. I will be showing them the video.
HA HA HAHA HA. Tenants do so much damage a deposit (severely limited in Commiefornia) pays for nothing. Tenants pay for nothing. Not to mention they have to be evicted, they owe thousands in lost rent as it is. Being a landlord is idiotic, it really is. There are many more former landlords than current landlords.
I work at a door shop and am always amused when people bring in "repaired" hollow core doors. While I can appreciate the craftsmanship required to try to make this type of repair look good, the bottom line is that they NEVER look good and the repairs ALWAYS fail. Unless you are working with a style that is discontinued and unavailable, you will ALWAYS be light years ahead just replacing the slab.
My daughter at the age of 9 kicked a door like the one in the video and made a hole about 3"x6". I repaired it like this and it turned out great. She is now 37 years old and the repair is still holding strong.
i was asked to repair such a door (on both sides, 3 total holes) and i told them, these doors are dirt cheap just buy a new one and i will hang it... NO... ok, i'll fix it... so i did 2 different types of fix, one on each side that i came up with... one was perfect, one was almost perfect (and could have been perfect had i been willing to do one more coat after priming).. so it DID look good, and did NOT fail... but for my time it would just make more sense to get a new one... but i'm not the one signing the checks, so i don't care
It does indeed, however, I find that undercutting the door a little and getting the bondo under the surface will help with underpinning the structure of the finish.
I really like your video but, you talk so softly we could do without the music. The music makes it hard to hear what you are telling us. I hope you do more videos on home repairs. Thanks so much ! 😃👍❤
I Needed This Video!!!! It Is A Great Video For A First Time Learner Who Just Needs A Touch Up And Doesn't Know How To Remove Or Install A Whole Door. Thanks!!!!!
Expanding foam and Bondo always a winning combination. With your background music, I expected Billy Jack to appear any time..I'm like you, instead of running out to buy something new I find pleasure in making a repair..
Try using loud video on one of your yt vids, it may confuse the algorithm and get you more views. Billy Jack, thats before your time. Thanks for watching
While you faff your way to the lumber yard, wait in line to pay for it, rent a truck, sharpen your chisel, install the door, install the lockset, paint the door twice, I will be at the pub enjoying all the money I saved. Cheers
@@andrewgilbride7546 agree with all of that just couldn’t be bothered to point it out. Repair might be worth it on desert island. If you can get the foam😂
I filled a big hole in a varnished wood door with a tube of woof filler, and then sanded it. It work some patience to get a wood grain look on the patch with stain. After a few years I couldn’t find the hole without careful examination.
Great video I too have used spray foam for similar repairs it works well I’ve found that a serrated insulation knife or even a bread knife trims the foam very well. Spray foam also is an excellent adhesive as well as a filler.. Good job! Tom R
Doors of that standard must be expensive in the US. Here in the UK, we would just replace it. Far cheaper than that process. All that said, the finish was impressive.👍🏻
For beginners, Bondo dries really fast, easy on the hardener, and it's hard to sand. Make sure don't let it stick out just put as many coats as needed.
I liked everything, up until you dumped an 8th of a can of bondo into it. You could have easily cut the hole square and used the piece of scrap wood you used to hold the bondo to actually be the patch
@@douglashill7059 mostly when installing large custom molding that were going to get a paint finish joints that had small gaps Once on a personal thing i needed 2 pinapples on the top plinth blocks So o flattend out some bondo and shaped it into pineapples scratched diamond pattern on the bodys then glued and tack nailed them on the blocks once painted it looked great
You are very observant, camera man did not push the start button. However, you just knock the first application down with sand paper, repeat the application, knock it down with sand paper again, and then repeat for a total of three coats. Thanks for watching.
It is an option. If repair/replacing this door was the only project in the house, then replace the panel. If this is just one of many projects, it may make dollars and sense to repair it like this. Comes out to about $2 per door and an hour of labor
If you are a tenant, definitely worth it.. new slab means picking out the slab/delivery oversized item, de-locking from old slab, de-hinging, re-locking to new slab, re-hinging.. the issue of the lock alone will shut the project down and you are out $80 per slab + labor on lock (likely more than the slab) You can re-use the bondo / sandpaper / paint for repairing base boards or door trim that have worn out to the particle too
When you trim the foam , trim it so there is a slight concave, that way you dont have foam sticking out through the bondo. Best tip is to do the door lying flat. Second tip, the time and effort that goes into getting a quality finish, you are better off getting a new door. Hollow doors are relatively cheap.
Derek, actually best to trim the foam below and under the door panel a tad (underpinning) , so that the patch is structurally a part of the door panel. Otherwise, the bondo is just floating on the foam and any slight touch will pop the bond. I can't argue your point about the cost of hollow core doors, but it depends on who's money you are spending.
Great video. I would totally stop after applying all the good stuff and letting it dry. I will then come back next day and paint that good stuff bulge like a wasp nest. Would make a great conversation piece.
Thank you for the video! The bottom of my backyard door rotted out and I was about to do the same procedure you did. Nice to know I am on the right track. So you left the first coat of bondo recessed a bit? Did you rough it up some before the second coating? Thanks again 👍🤠
Instead of foam filler I cut a piece of ply 20mm larger than the hole, cut it in half to make inserting possible and slipped them into the cavity then glued it back onto the hole. I was then left with an area that I used the strong version of spakfilla to fill and sand. Easier to cleanup than foam and Bondo.
Thank you for the tutorial! I am easily annoyed with certain background music and yours didn’t bother me at all. Seems like a bunch of whiney men lol don’t worry about it! 😊
Excellent video, will definitely be using this for repairing multiple doors. Only criticism is the music drowned out your explanations a bit, but thank you
as opposed to Bondo - which is great - try Durham's rock hard putty. Sets up quickly - firm in less than 15 minutes - does not shrink. An easy yellow powder you mix just with water. You can easily determine the thickness for spreading. Sands very very easily!! Great for indoor work. When totally cured it WILL absorb water though. But with primer and paint - no big deal!! IT cures quite hard too!!
Try turning the door round so the hole is on the other side , if not a cupboard put some parcel tape over the hole and paint it. If it’s the bathroom door drill a hole in the hole for added ventilation . Trade Tip : Fill the hollow core door up to hole with macaroni and glue and spray paint to desired finish.👍
I drove to my local Home Depot, purchased a new door, got back home, hung the door and this video still wasn't over. ;) Seriously though, nicely done. Thanks for posting.
Well except for the music being to loud that was simply awesome I am really impressed with this fix thank you for sharing this with us!!!❤️
Thanks Nellie, try this door repair video without the music th-cam.com/video/lVa08pK0mT4/w-d-xo.html
Now - when using Bondo - you have the luan for mixing - get another piece of luan big enough to completely cover the hole. Then, after applying the bondo to fill, cover it with the piece of luan and have WAX PAPER on the luan that comes in contact with the Bondo. Hold the luan/wax paper firmly against the surface - or you can use a staple gun to hold it in place around the perimeter (the holes are easy enough to spackle over later) When the Bondo heats up and firms up - after maybe ten minutes - remove the luan and peel off the wax paper - you will a GLASS SMOOTH surface on the Bondo!!! After it cures within an hour - you can sand it gently with 80 grit if needed. Of course spot sparkle if needed!! (35 yr handyman Northern California)
I watched the entire video without even having a broken door. I'm a handyman and I love to see new ideas! Having used all of these materials, I thought it was a brilliant idea. People complaining about the steps and wanting to buy a new door.. Sometimes $100 is out of reach and 3 days/$38 is all you have. Plus, making a repair that gets the job done is more satisfying than replacing the whole problem! Cheers!
Thanks Britton for seeing the value. Take a look at this door repair video th-cam.com/video/lVa08pK0mT4/w-d-xo.html
how many you all raged at a hollow interior door with your fist? LOL
Great idea. Here are some important points that were glossed over. Cut the foam with a knife once it dries as it makes it easier and gives you a more precise cut. Thoroughly read the directions on the BONDO can. You have a limited time to work with bondo. The more hardener you add to bondo above the suggested amount in the mix directions the faster it sets. Bondo sets in a few minutes but goes through a heat while doing so and becomes unworkable slightly before it sets. It will start to clump and it has a slight odor. So if you are sensitive to chemical smells take the door outside.
This is a good way to make the repair. However, I manage apartment complexes and the amount if time this takes does not beat buying a new door. They're roughly about $30 so while it isn't cost effective for my purposes I still see the value in this work. Cheers.
Always good to connect with someone in the trades. Thanks for watching
Today the same door is about $120.00 if you can find one.
Some people don’t have the luxury or truck to go pick up a new door. It’s just more convenient to spend 30 minutes to fix it as good as you can.
You can’t get a 6 panel door with hinges and holes cut to match professionally for less than $70-80 at best. And property managers usually hire someone to install and then paint it. The average 6 panel door replacement is roughly $130-160. Even for a rental. Having someone do a decent patch and paint like this video is where you get a diy $25 fix or a handyman $60 repair special out of the tenants security deposit. So saying this guy isn’t helping or cost effective is ridiculous
Hey I see you manage apartments and I have a question! My puppy chewed a hole in my door frame can I fix it myself or should I just lose my $1000 deposit? She also chewed a hole in my bathroom sink cabnet & I don’t think that’s fixable. For reference she’s a Pit Bull with separation anxiety that’s why she’s chewing on wood
I had a hole in a door that I repaired this way and it worked well; however, the spray foam unexpectedly expanded a bit more over the course of a couple of weeks and pushed out the repair I'd made. Not really a huge deal, as I simply sanded it down again and renewed the repair. With that said, it was a bit of an irritation, but it was still easier and cheaper for me than replacing the door.
It happens on occasion
Yeah that happened to me also. There's different strengths of the foam & how much they expand.
Use a nail polish remover or acetone on the blade. It will help remove the foam easily. Beware not to over use the acetone as it will eat away at the foam. Just enough on the blade to easily cut through
Thanks for the tip
I'm so glad I'm retired. Forty years of remodeling. You may have helped many people. No reply needed. Keep it up my friend.
Thanks 👍
Hello.
I had some rust holes on my S-10 pickup.
Cheaned the area with only a wire brush, then just filled the void with spray foam. Let it dry, took a steak knife and sawed off the unneeded part. Sanded the area almost flat, and added 2 coats of bondo ontop. Sanded till I got my desired affect. I can kisk the area as hard as I want, and the area's bodo didn't even budge. The heck with patching the area, from now on, spray foam is my #1 go to body work, home repair best friend.
BullyBilly, Colorado.
William, you are awesome and inspiring
Bondo works great on all sorts of repairs.. my favorite, rookie furniture movers beating the crap outta doorways, walls, corners, railings, etc.
Thanks for the tips!
You can save some time on the two extra coats of Bondo by just going heavy enough above flush and start shaving it down with a heavy rasp or grater, in just a couple of minutes, before it gets hard. You have to work fast though, or it will be as hard as a rock in five minutes. You must get in to flush in less than five minutes and then just finish with 80 then 120 grit to smooth it.
I am from Ukraine, l don't understand individual words what did you say, but you are great master!! Bravo!
and you are a great visual learner. Thanks for watching
Thanks for the useful info... good trick with the cardboard making an internal frame of sorts. The music so loud hard to hear you and annoying.
yes, hoping to add a little more structure under the bondo and help contain the foam. Sorry about the music edit, I have subtitles now if you want to turn down the volume
@@douglashill7059 thanks for listening to my feedback! That means a lot.
I have a bunch of properties and we are left with a ton of holes in doors as well. One of my friends is a carpenter and he helps me do repairs to our properties. We use spray foam to fill in the majority of the holes, and then go over them with wood putty. It doesn't shrink like drywall mud. If I can't find the wood putty I will definitely consider Bondo. Thanks !
Hi Les, try this door repair video that adds the wood grain th-cam.com/video/lVa08pK0mT4/w-d-xo.html
I just used cardboard and some spackle. Worked great. You got a million views though, so I guess you win.
Thanks for watching
Thank you. My daughter has autism. She’s outgrown her violent meltdown stages. We have holes kicked in almost every door in our house. Replacing them isn’t feasible. Doors aren’t expensive but labor is for that many. I think I can fix most of them with this technique. I’ve already patched several large holes in walls with drywall pieces. This really encourages me. I can do this. It can only be an improvement.
Hi Julie, thanks for watching. You got this. Also, take a look at this door repair video that adds the wood grain th-cam.com/video/lVa08pK0mT4/w-d-xo.html
Thanks.
Everyone else is talking about how cheap it is to buy new doors, yeah…forgetting that some of us will have to pay someone to come and fit them.
I’d rather buy these items for £40 and repair the hole in the door.
@@rosalinefadipe6718 Anyways it’s your money and your door not theirs !
I just put my wife's head through our door thanks for the pro tip
How does that make the door feel?
😁😁😁
Nice
It's my ambition in life to have doors with no big holes in them 😂😂😂
Well, no need to listen to all these peeps saying a new door installation is easier. I have a 79" by 29" door and frankly would rather do this patch method rather than resize a 80 by 30 and chisel hinge holes with absolutely no equipment. Thanks!
Nice to have options. Thanks for watching.
Thank u sooo much! I like the results, you can’t tell it ever had a hole in it. I Most definitely approve of the process! 💯
Thank you so much
Great job just finished mines cuz the company dosent want to spend the money so I put the room back in order to make money appreciate the hack bruh💪🏼💯🙌🏼
That is awesome!
Reading the comments people must be deaf I heard everything you said loud and clear you done a wonderful job.
Thanks Allen, a lot of instruction is simply visual and they can turn their volume down and just read the cc.
I bet they punched their door again after complaining about the audio 😂
Passed the inspection! Good job 👍
Thanks! 👍
you could put painters tape or aluminum tape over the hole on the door then cut a hole in the tape and spray the foam in. And use a lower expanding foam would work the best if anyone else is thinking of doing this.👍 A fiberglass filer would be a little bit more durable then bondo but great video
Nice tutorial. As inexpensive as those doors are, in my opinion, I just bought a new door and save the Bondo for something more substantial that needs repaired. Thank you again for the video.
Thanks for watching
fantastic video. Honestly I couldn't have done it without that groovy psychedelic music and fuzz tone guitar!
Rock on!
Tell the band to turn it down a notch 🙂 Cool tip on the repair. thanks
Absolutely, rock band was practicing in the basement. I play cow bell part time with the band and mostly do repairs that they cause
Jared, try this door repair video without the loud music th-cam.com/video/lVa08pK0mT4/w-d-xo.html
If those crappy hollow doors already had foam in them they would not bust so easily.
For the money invested and the time, buy new 6 panel and router new hinges. 2nd choice is to buy just the slab and cut one panel out on its natural body line where it goes into like an ogee edge. Cut the damage door panel off, but leave 1/2in reveal after the ogee edge. Put glue on the 1/2inch reveal and place the repair panel on top of the revealed edge. Tape it in place for an hour. This method saves hanging the slab.
Doors in 2024 are not cheap and can I borrow your truck???
This is how we repair any primed doors at the shop I work at. 😊
I used your how to guide to fix some rotted window sills for a customer of mine rather than replacing the whole frame and brick mold. Your technique is greatly appreciated. I wish I had guys like you working for me.
Hey thanks Daniel
This is a great tip. Thank you. I know it’s not your fault, but tell the kids in the other bedroom to please turn down their music.
Love it, thanks for watching
yeah lower the music, I would rather hear you just talk
don't worry about the wood grain that's no longer embossed into that door section. A new hollow core door made to fit that frame by a door shop would run about $100, or you can spend $6 on spray foam, $15 on bondo, $8 on sand paper and about 3 hours your time making a repair that will crack out later. This might be good for very small repairs if a person has all the materials and tools already.
$38 for a new door in the UK.
You forgot the most important part. This project took about three days. Overnight setup for the foam, then bongo setup time then sanding and painting and drying times. If this job was for a remote location, the multiple trips would be looser project. Time is money, even if the job was not remote.
Nate, you got it right, if this is your only project, get a new slab. If you have many projects going on in the house, this can be worked in easily.
Hey Kevin, just added this video that addresses the wood grain studio.th-cam.com/users/videolVa08pK0mT4
I have a 4 panel arch top interior door. A new runs $500 -$600
Thanks for the video. This suits somebody who's trying to fix it by themselves. If you want to hire someone, better get a new door to save the labour cost.
James, if you hire someone, you will pay for the labor. This is for painters, handymen, and homeowners. I know most carpenters refuse to paint, not all, but most.
Thank you for blasting music so that I can't hear what you're saying, very smart
Hi Sam, try this door repair video without the music th-cam.com/video/lVa08pK0mT4/w-d-xo.html
I like how you showed every step besides the most important part
Sorry about that, camera guy did not show up on time. Try this door repair with all the steps try this door repair without the loud music th-cam.com/video/lVa08pK0mT4/w-d-xo.html
Good idea filling the hole with the foam. I have tenants that leave me holes in doors all too often! In the past I have used drywall mud to fill caved in sections and so far that works as well as the bondo seems to.
Time to get some new tenants. Thanks for watching
I would have used a hacksaw blade to cut it evenly
@@alanblack5883 same
Damn looks good , I would just purchase a new door but that’s me
Thanks Determined Veteran. The door may not fit in your Camaro, just saying
@@douglashill7059 😂😂😂 good observation 👍
@@douglashill7059 lol thats my problem now.
This is an instruction video. Not a survey of who would do what
@@jimmyb1356 Jimmy, thanks for playing.
Thank you! I’m having a tough time finding a door in my width because it is unique. This is a lifesaver. Would love to see the details of the sanding steps between bonding and primer and the music was a little distraction. Thank you for the great video!
Coming soon!
I can tell by the loud music and the hole in the door that this is a cool place!
Thanks Jim, try this door repair video without the music th-cam.com/video/lVa08pK0mT4/w-d-xo.html
gave me insight on filling a hollow core door. Thanks
Glad I could help
Interesting technique, I had my teenage son by and hang a new door after he smashed a hole in it :)
Oh wow! Your son learned a new skill
Thanks so much for doing this video for all of us, I’m from Chile. 😀
Stay warm. Thanks for watching
Well done. The music is a bit loud. Thank you for sharing
Noted
Hassan, check out this door repair video without the music th-cam.com/video/lVa08pK0mT4/w-d-xo.html
A spray bottle with water and a light mist on the foam will make it kick off in minutes vs. waiting overnight. We used to do doors more or less how you’ve shown here but then we figured out five minute Dura bond was way faster and in about 30 minutes you could have the thing completely done.
Hi Ryan, yes, I have tried durabond on smaller projects and believe it held up. Bondo will actually dry enough in 10 minutes for another application. I just had a lot of projects in that house and bounced around for a few days on the various projects. Time on this door totaled 1 hour. Thanks for the spray bottle tip.
@@douglashill7059 all the best to you.
Nice! Good for landlords or renters with wild boys!!
Definitely! Seems to be happening alot lately
Having several rental properties I’ve had my share of broken doors. I have a cabinet shop and make all or most repairs myself. This is a good working idea but time and material cost, these doors are cheap and better in the long run to just replace the door.
If the tenant breaks the door through neglect or anger, they pay for the door. Accidents happen but property damage through anger isn’t tolerated.
Great, you have the tools, and talent, to take on a variety of repairs. This method would take a total of an hour, in ten minute increments
@@douglashill7059
I like this idea and totally support it. I would use it with doors I can no longer match. I thank you for posting it.
It’s just for me to get in and out and move on to the next problem it would just be faster time and cost wise to replace the door.
I have 42 units to keep up.
At 67, thinking of turning it over to my kids soon. I will be showing them the video.
@@douglashill7059 …1 hr? Then how come you let it dried overnight? 3 coats of bondo and sanding….def not 10 minutes in between!
HA HA HAHA HA. Tenants do so much damage a deposit (severely limited in Commiefornia) pays for nothing. Tenants pay for nothing. Not to mention they have to be evicted, they owe thousands in lost rent as it is.
Being a landlord is idiotic, it really is. There are many more former landlords than current landlords.
I work at a door shop and am always amused when people bring in "repaired" hollow core doors. While I can appreciate the craftsmanship required to try to make this type of repair look good, the bottom line is that they NEVER look good and the repairs ALWAYS fail. Unless you are working with a style that is discontinued and unavailable, you will ALWAYS be light years ahead just replacing the slab.
My daughter at the age of 9 kicked a door like the one in the video and made a hole about 3"x6". I repaired it like this and it turned out great. She is now 37 years old and the repair is still holding strong.
Awesome Dan!
What do you mean by replacing the slab? Do you mean the whole door?
i was asked to repair such a door (on both sides, 3 total holes) and i told them, these doors are dirt cheap just buy a new one and i will hang it... NO... ok, i'll fix it...
so i did 2 different types of fix, one on each side that i came up with... one was perfect, one was almost perfect (and could have been perfect had i been willing to do one more coat after priming)..
so it DID look good, and did NOT fail... but for my time it would just make more sense to get a new one... but i'm not the one signing the checks, so i don't care
@@frenchvideoclub8031 yes he does. It’s a joke to waste your time repairing a cheap door like this.
Awesome! I’ve used all of the materials before so it was very easy to follow! Thanks for the video
Thanks for your kind comment, cheers
You left me speechless. Amazing job
Thanks for watching
That was really well done. Tricks of the trade will save you money. Thanks buddy!
You bet Brian, if you want even more detail to your door repair try this video th-cam.com/video/lVa08pK0mT4/w-d-xo.html
A new door may be cheaper after you add labor and materials cost.
Total time on this project was around 1 hour, 10 minutes for each phase, material cost was under $15
I use a hacksaw blade for cutting the foam off it leaves a much smoother surface on the foam
It does indeed, however, I find that undercutting the door a little and getting the bondo under the surface will help with underpinning the structure of the finish.
Take a look at this video using your tip studio.th-cam.com/users/videolVa08pK0mT4
I really like your video but, you talk so softly we could do without the music. The music makes it hard to hear what you are telling us. I hope you do more videos on home repairs. Thanks so much ! 😃👍❤
Retha, try this door repair video without the music th-cam.com/video/lVa08pK0mT4/w-d-xo.html
I Needed This Video!!!! It Is A Great Video For A First Time Learner Who Just Needs A Touch Up And Doesn't Know How To Remove Or Install A Whole Door. Thanks!!!!!
Well there ya go. You just made my day. Glad to make yours a little easier
Try this door repair video that has a way to add wood grain texture th-cam.com/video/lVa08pK0mT4/w-d-xo.html
Here in the UK, we have a two part wood filler, high performance ,ronseal, in white, ideal for that repair.
Expanding foam and Bondo always a winning combination. With your background music, I expected Billy Jack to appear any time..I'm like you, instead of running out to buy something new I find pleasure in making a repair..
Try using loud video on one of your yt vids, it may confuse the algorithm and get you more views. Billy Jack, thats before your time. Thanks for watching
Got to say these doors in the UK are cheap enough to replace and probably quicker than faffing about with repair!. Don’t get your foam on the carpet!
While you faff your way to the lumber yard, wait in line to pay for it, rent a truck, sharpen your chisel, install the door, install the lockset, paint the door twice, I will be at the pub enjoying all the money I saved. Cheers
£28 ($38) Wicks and B and Q primed, you still have to paint the repaired door.
@@andrewgilbride7546 agree with all of that just couldn’t be bothered to point it out. Repair might be worth it on desert island. If you can get the foam😂
@@g.johnson3119 Lol, try this door repair video that adds wood grain texture th-cam.com/video/lVa08pK0mT4/w-d-xo.html
Dude! I used a jar of Skippy's peanut butter it came out smooth and smells good $3.49
Lol, creamy, not crunchy I hope
Ha!
Great!! Thanks Douglas, greetings from México.
Thanks for watching Jorge!
I filled a big hole in a varnished wood door with a tube of woof filler, and then sanded it. It work some patience to get a wood grain look on the patch with stain. After a few years I couldn’t find the hole without careful examination.
The sign of a great repair is when you can no longer find the repair years later. Good job!
Great video I too have used spray foam for similar repairs it works well I’ve found that a serrated insulation knife or even a bread knife trims the foam very well. Spray foam also is an excellent adhesive as well as a filler.. Good job! Tom R
Tom, you may enjoy this door repair video as well th-cam.com/video/lVa08pK0mT4/w-d-xo.html
thats good stuff!!!
looks brand new !!
gonna give this a try
thanks man! AWESOME
Thanks Quitnie
This is one of the BEST step by step videos I've seen on repairing a hollow core door. Great work!!
Wow, thanks!
Same! Say through many and settled on this one ❤️
I left a negative comment until I realized that this guy actually takes time to get back to every single comment. So with that I take my comment back
Deleted
Doors of that standard must be expensive in the US. Here in the UK, we would just replace it. Far cheaper than that process. All that said, the finish was impressive.👍🏻
Thanks for sharing
Good work. Thank you.
Thanks for watching!
For beginners, Bondo dries really fast, easy on the hardener, and it's hard to sand. Make sure don't let it stick out just put as many coats as needed.
Great tip Gil!
I liked everything, up until you dumped an 8th of a can of bondo into it. You could have easily cut the hole square and used the piece of scrap wood you used to hold the bondo to actually be the patch
ummm, interesting concept. I will let you do that video
This is ever landlords dream come true.
Owning houses is great. Except for tenants. They generally suck.
I was ran sn architectual fixture shop fo15 yrs bondo was a great tool
tell me some of the repairs you made
@@douglashill7059 mostly when installing large custom molding that were going to get a paint finish joints that had small gaps
Once on a personal thing i needed 2 pinapples on the top plinth blocks
So o flattend out some bondo and shaped it into pineapples scratched diamond pattern on the bodys then glued and tack nailed them on the blocks once painted it looked great
Brilliantly done. Much appreciated.
Thanks for watching
Loose the background music
Sorry, it is loud. Good tip, thanks
It was a bit loud but I wouldn't remove it entirely. It definitely added to the professionalism of the video.
John, try this door repair video without the loud music th-cam.com/video/lVa08pK0mT4/w-d-xo.html
Yo this is dope! Definitely about to try this next time. I work in maintenance for a Multi family building.
Go make some money with this. Thanks for watching
Franklin, try this video if you ever need to add wood grain texture to a door th-cam.com/video/lVa08pK0mT4/w-d-xo.html
At first i didn't see it being successful , but he turned it around and it look damn gd , good job..
All things are possible, thanks for watching
Bravo - bondo for wood repair is a life saver .
Used to have a fiberglass boat, but never tried it on teak. Any good?
@@douglashill7059 I have a fiber glass boat but I used the bondo on door frames and windows.
There are steps missing. You go from filling to hold to the door being patched. Question why wasn't those steps included??????
You are very observant, camera man did not push the start button. However, you just knock the first application down with sand paper, repeat the application, knock it down with sand paper again, and then repeat for a total of three coats. Thanks for watching.
Delarie, try this video with all the steps studio.th-cam.com/users/videolVa08pK0mT4
Nice video but is worth the time and work instead of a new slab?
Well nice job anyway.
It is an option. If repair/replacing this door was the only project in the house, then replace the panel. If this is just one of many projects, it may make dollars and sense to repair it like this. Comes out to about $2 per door and an hour of labor
Yes it most definitely is worth it. Do the math.
If you are a tenant, definitely worth it.. new slab means picking out the slab/delivery oversized item, de-locking from old slab, de-hinging, re-locking to new slab, re-hinging.. the issue of the lock alone will shut the project down and you are out $80 per slab + labor on lock (likely more than the slab)
You can re-use the bondo / sandpaper / paint for repairing base boards or door trim that have worn out to the particle too
Put solid wood doors in so when tenants punch them they break bones.
Well done. Much more positive than my comment that I decided not to post
Lot of work for a 50 00 door how much is your time worth
Intended for folks that have more time than money. Thanks for watching.
Exactly!!!
@@ms.ladietoyou8672Where do you get a nice door for $50? Plus,can I borrow your truck?
When you trim the foam , trim it so there is a slight concave, that way you dont have foam sticking out through the bondo. Best tip is to do the door lying flat. Second tip, the time and effort that goes into getting a quality finish, you are better off getting a new door. Hollow doors are relatively cheap.
Derek, actually best to trim the foam below and under the door panel a tad (underpinning) , so that the patch is structurally a part of the door panel. Otherwise, the bondo is just floating on the foam and any slight touch will pop the bond. I can't argue your point about the cost of hollow core doors, but it depends on who's money you are spending.
Great video. I would totally stop after applying all the good stuff and letting it dry. I will then come back next day and paint that good stuff bulge like a wasp nest. Would make a great conversation piece.
lol, I really wanted to just paint it
Please turn down the music I'm 70 years old and I can't hardly hear you
Sorry for the music, try this video instead studio.th-cam.com/users/videolVa08pK0mT4
Thank you for the video, it was very helpful. But, it’s really hard to hear you, especially with that horrible music. Please, no music next time. 🤫👍
Ok, promise. Thanks for watching
IT, try this door repair video without the loud music th-cam.com/video/lVa08pK0mT4/w-d-xo.html
Thank you for the video! The bottom of my backyard door rotted out and I was about to do the same procedure you did. Nice to know I am on the right track. So you left the first coat of bondo recessed a bit? Did you rough it up some before the second coating? Thanks again 👍🤠
Yes, sand it between coats
No need to rough it up for the second coat
Instead of foam filler I cut a piece of ply 20mm larger than the hole, cut it in half to make inserting possible and slipped them into the cavity then glued it back onto the hole. I was then left with an area that I used the strong version of spakfilla to fill and sand. Easier to cleanup than foam and Bondo.
Yes, works well with flat panel
great idea, this will be saving me a lot of money
Great to hear! If you have doors with wood grain, try this video th-cam.com/video/lVa08pK0mT4/w-d-xo.html
Muzak far too loud. Reupload.
check out door repair video without the music th-cam.com/video/lVa08pK0mT4/w-d-xo.html
Please lose that background music, it just made me punch another hole in my door
The music is with purpose to give you a chance to practice repairing a door
James, try this door repair video without the music th-cam.com/video/lVa08pK0mT4/w-d-xo.html
Funny. Worst. Music. Ever.
Good vid except music is louder than your voice so hard to watch.
Thanks, good tip for next video
D, try this door repair video without the loud music th-cam.com/video/lVa08pK0mT4/w-d-xo.html
Just watching you patched that large hole was like watching a magician performs magic!
Thank you
Another tip when doing repair is to take door off and lay flat when using filler, much easier to do as no tendency for filler to run.
Bruce, good tip for someone that has saw horses and bad knees
Thank you for the tutorial! I am easily annoyed with certain background music and yours didn’t bother me at all. Seems like a bunch of whiney men lol don’t worry about it! 😊
Lol, thanks for watching
Not whiny man. Just men who want to hear what he has to say instead of hearing this horrible music that drowns him out
@@hab9609 Try this door repair video without loud music th-cam.com/video/lVa08pK0mT4/w-d-xo.html
Excellent video, will definitely be using this for repairing multiple doors. Only criticism is the music drowned out your explanations a bit, but thank you
Thanks! Try this door repair video without the loud music th-cam.com/video/lVa08pK0mT4/w-d-xo.html
as opposed to Bondo - which is great - try Durham's rock hard putty. Sets up quickly - firm in less than 15 minutes - does not shrink. An easy yellow powder you mix just with water. You can easily determine the thickness for spreading. Sands very very easily!!
Great for indoor work. When totally cured it WILL absorb water though. But with primer and paint - no big deal!! IT cures quite hard too!!
From Steve. You did an awesome job. Thanks for all your help.
Glad to help
You save my day. Great video. Very informative. Right to the point.
Glad it helped! Thanks for watching
Great tip for those doors. You look like a pro. This will save alot of people money when fix those cheap doors they are hollow and.so weak really
Thanks 👍
Try turning the door round so the hole is on the other side , if not a cupboard put some parcel tape over the hole and paint it. If it’s the bathroom door drill a hole in the hole for added ventilation . Trade Tip : Fill the hollow core door up to hole with macaroni and glue and spray paint to desired finish.👍
All great tips! lol
Really liked your technique.
Thank you! Cheers!
I drove to my local Home Depot, purchased a new door, got back home, hung the door and this video still wasn't over. ;) Seriously though, nicely done. Thanks for posting.
Lol, thanks for watching
Wow! Amazing job!
Thank you Brenda and thanks for watching