Eric The Viking
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- 19 Jan 2010
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We moved in here almost eighteen years ago.
The house dates from around 1905, and has really deep pebbledash ("boulderdash"). It was whitewashed, I think just a lime wash of some sort, which was on the way out.
I jetwashed it, and painted it by hand (rollers and spraying are almost impossible), with a decent "Sandtex" masonry paint. It took around nine months, 27 "buckets" of paint (yup, almost 700 litres), and almost all my spare time, mainly because the pebbledash is so deep (progress is very slow). I think the surface area is around 3x-4x what you'd expect from the building dimensions, and it's got 'pockets' and all sorts in the finish (from when it was first done).
The actual cement is stuck fast, but my 17-year-old surface coat is failing (I know, I should have redone it a long time ago). Where it's cracked, water is getting in, and, because we have solid walls, that means penetrating damp. Where the Sandtex hasn't cracked, though, it's like elasticated concrete. And that's the main problem, as I see it.
Getting the damaged surface off is going to be tricky and this time I'm not sure a jetwash will hack it. I have to make a start soon, or it won't get done this summer. And another wet winter will cause big problems.
Has anybody got any suggestions for getting it back to a stable surface for repainting?
Thanks,
E.
The house dates from around 1905, and has really deep pebbledash ("boulderdash"). It was whitewashed, I think just a lime wash of some sort, which was on the way out.
I jetwashed it, and painted it by hand (rollers and spraying are almost impossible), with a decent "Sandtex" masonry paint. It took around nine months, 27 "buckets" of paint (yup, almost 700 litres), and almost all my spare time, mainly because the pebbledash is so deep (progress is very slow). I think the surface area is around 3x-4x what you'd expect from the building dimensions, and it's got 'pockets' and all sorts in the finish (from when it was first done).
The actual cement is stuck fast, but my 17-year-old surface coat is failing (I know, I should have redone it a long time ago). Where it's cracked, water is getting in, and, because we have solid walls, that means penetrating damp. Where the Sandtex hasn't cracked, though, it's like elasticated concrete. And that's the main problem, as I see it.
Getting the damaged surface off is going to be tricky and this time I'm not sure a jetwash will hack it. I have to make a start soon, or it won't get done this summer. And another wet winter will cause big problems.
Has anybody got any suggestions for getting it back to a stable surface for repainting?
Thanks,
E.