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Posted

Hi all

 

I am restoring an old lime and stone church. I'm looking at Hanson Hydrated Lime which they say won't stick without concrete. I assume I can't add concrete to my lime mix? I have seen that rough sand may provide just as good a stick? Any help would be very much appricated.

 

Thanks

 

Justin

Posted

I shal be randering and plastering, but plastering will be first. Basically the whole building needs a bit of a lime going over.

Posted
10 minutes ago, Justin Tuijl said:

Can the Hanson Hydrated Lime  be used to make putty lime?

 

I think it can if you add water and leave it for a while (weeks / months) but I think the lime putty is supposed to be better.  Never used it myself and it is quite a specialist area.  If it is conservation type work do not use any cement at all.

Posted

If you need a bit of practical advice 

Any of the colleges with a plastering course still use both line sand and putty lime 

As it can be easily chipped off Then ground up and continually reused 

Posted

If you need advice and a lot of lime then get in touch with Mike Wye - probably one of the best and most knowledgeable suppliers of lime products. 

  • Like 1
Posted

Hydraulic lime is what you want not hydrated. Hydrated is used more like a plasticiser.

You can do all rendering/plastering with hydraulic lime and sand, no putty needed - a lot cheaper I would think.

I would use sharper sand for scratch coats and a finer plastering sand for finish.

 

Is this external as weather protection and internal?

Is it a conversion or just staying as a church? If a conversion how are you insulating?

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