Mr Blobby Posted yesterday at 09:41 Posted yesterday at 09:41 (edited) HP12 base coat was applied on garage wall in the rain and now looks like this They told me it would be fine when I pointed at the skies during application. Of course they would say that. But it's not fine. In fairness this base coat is just to seal the blockwork before battens are applied and cladding over the top, but even so, it looks like salts all washed out all over. Bill has arrived. What do I do here? Edited yesterday at 09:41 by Mr Blobby
Russell griffiths Posted yesterday at 10:50 Posted yesterday at 10:50 Get them to re do it, or don’t pay. 2 1
Mr Blobby Posted 18 hours ago Author Posted 18 hours ago 10 hours ago, Russell griffiths said: Get them to re do it, or don’t pay. All of it, or some of it. Builder thinks most of it is ok. Lot's of salts on the surface and light patches, is this just aesthetic, or will the mortar be weakened? Also, I asked for the base coat to have a break at the dpc to not bridge it. My builder rolled his eyes, and insists this is nonsense. Render scratch coat is always applied as a single coat over the dpc to the ground. Bridging the dpc seems wrong to me, is it?
Russell griffiths Posted 18 hours ago Posted 18 hours ago Your builder still thinks it’s 1980. break at dpc for me. 1
Nickfromwales Posted 14 hours ago Posted 14 hours ago 4 hours ago, Mr Blobby said: Bridging the dpc seems wrong to me, is it? Yup. Why introduce any unavoidable risk, especially if you're cladding over it which would make rectifying any feck-ups a costly process. 4 hours ago, Mr Blobby said: Builder thinks most of it is ok. Lot's of salts on the surface and light patches, is this just aesthetic, or will the mortar be weakened? It's more of disappointment / frustration vs life or death, so patching it in should be fine if it's not the fundamental rain screen. 1
saveasteading Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago I don't know the product, but would be wary that the rest will continue to fall off. That might get stick behind battens and be worse than having nothing. No money until this is sorted. Make sure you put this in writing. Keep it reasonable but robust. Is it holding your project up? The experts above can advise if it needs to be removed and prepared before redoing.
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