Laying blue engineering bricks - Brickwork
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Sounds plausible but would be concerned of interaction between oil and cement if applied before.
You could sponge the worst off after pointing then a mild acid wash when the mortar is cured.
Care with laying can eliminate the above. Try to get the mortar bed so that it doesn't squeeze out as far as the face. Point up afterwards by placing a small amount of mortar on the pointing iron and pushing into the perp or bed as you progress along the joint.
Takes a some getting used to though.
You could sponge the worst off after pointing then a mild acid wash when the mortar is cured.
Care with laying can eliminate the above. Try to get the mortar bed so that it doesn't squeeze out as far as the face. Point up afterwards by placing a small amount of mortar on the pointing iron and pushing into the perp or bed as you progress along the joint.
Takes a some getting used to though.
Cheers
Lemoncurd
Lemoncurd
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Back in the day when i was serving an apprenticeship of sorts, one of my first jobs was to go down manholes after the brickie was finished and shine the channels and every brick from bottom to top with aniseed oil. They had to be spotless in those days, i still pride myself on cleaning my manholes and woe betide anyone who walks away from one leaving snots, or not polishing the benching
sean
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Did you mean linseed oil Sean.seanandruby wrote:Back in the day when i was serving an apprenticeship of sorts, one of my first jobs was to go down manholes after the brickie was finished and shine the channels and every brick from bottom to top with aniseed oil. They had to be spotless in those days, i still pride myself on cleaning my manholes and woe betide anyone who walks away from one leaving snots, or not polishing the benching
Cheers
Lemoncurd
Lemoncurd
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if it was linseed you have to be careful as with cotton rags it can spontaneously combust
back to the OP
when we lay staffys as LC says keep it as neat as possible
then after you have jointed up use WD40 and a small cloth to polish the bricks up
I have seen lads using diesel but WD40 does a nice job
I dont like putting acid near brickwork as it etches the mortar
LLL
back to the OP
when we lay staffys as LC says keep it as neat as possible
then after you have jointed up use WD40 and a small cloth to polish the bricks up
I have seen lads using diesel but WD40 does a nice job
I dont like putting acid near brickwork as it etches the mortar
LLL
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Slowie, i was only reminiscing m8. Remember i said " i used to shine the brickwork in brick built manholes". I have never used it on externaI works, it takes for ever to dry and could be patchy and streaky. Personally i wouldn't use deisal oil. Keeping the brickwork clean in the first place is a top tip.
sean
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Wondered why i pulled the dogs in the night clubs :p :laugh:lemoncurd1702 wrote:seanandruby wrote:Yes probably, it was almost 50 years ago, to long to remember i know it was also used on cricket bats.
Linseed it is then.
You'd soon remember if it was aniseed by the pack of dogs following you home every night :laugh:
sean
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