Cleaning marshalls monoblock....
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- Location: sunny scotland
Bit of a strange one here.
Tommorrow i'm going to be laying 16m2 of marshalls driveline 50 vintage - charcoal.
Bought these a month ago from a local builders supply place ( think locks...)
They were on offer as the pack had been broken up. What i ended up buying was a full pallet never opened, and 2/3rds pallet that had been opened. £8/m2 hence why i bought them.
Looking at the pack that has been open - the are stained quite badly - and a quick test shows a scrub with fairy only removes the residual dust.
Pressure wash once they are down, or will test one with acid ?
Will follow with photo.
Going down on a known solid base, on mortar.
Tommorrow i'm going to be laying 16m2 of marshalls driveline 50 vintage - charcoal.
Bought these a month ago from a local builders supply place ( think locks...)
They were on offer as the pack had been broken up. What i ended up buying was a full pallet never opened, and 2/3rds pallet that had been opened. £8/m2 hence why i bought them.
Looking at the pack that has been open - the are stained quite badly - and a quick test shows a scrub with fairy only removes the residual dust.
Pressure wash once they are down, or will test one with acid ?
Will follow with photo.
Going down on a known solid base, on mortar.
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- Posts: 101
- Joined: Sun Jun 10, 2012 8:08 pm
- Location: sunny scotland
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Had look at the photo, look's sort of oil stain, without knowing what caused the stain, difficult to say what to use, dose it look like it is a surface stain or soaked into the brick?
Roger Oakley BDA(Europe)Member 2006
R&A Pressure Washing Services Ltd
info@rapressurewashing.co.uk
www.rapressurewashing.co.uk
R&A Pressure Washing Services Ltd
info@rapressurewashing.co.uk
www.rapressurewashing.co.uk
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- Posts: 101
- Joined: Sun Jun 10, 2012 8:08 pm
- Location: sunny scotland
Thanks for your reply - as ever the gent !
That brick came from the centre of a pallet - and has never been exposed since being struck......
Tbh the whole pallet is dirty - i just presume this was residual dust from rubbing during transport etc.
I guess they ARE vintage, so were always going to look odd.
I'll pull the rest of the pack apart and see how bad it is. I guess a pressure wash will help once they are down.....
I'll leave my black limestone question for another day/week/month
That brick came from the centre of a pallet - and has never been exposed since being struck......
Tbh the whole pallet is dirty - i just presume this was residual dust from rubbing during transport etc.
I guess they ARE vintage, so were always going to look odd.
I'll pull the rest of the pack apart and see how bad it is. I guess a pressure wash will help once they are down.....
I'll leave my black limestone question for another day/week/month
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- Joined: Wed Aug 15, 2007 3:02 pm
- Location: Staines Surrey
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You have more then one type of stain there, look's like a bit of rust? how that would have got into a new pack? maybe metal fillings? some look like it is where the bricks have rubbed together in transit, then there is the brown stains almost like a mould. I'b be inclined to give a few a bleach wash, to see what comes off, the rust won't that's a different approach. If you are going to wait till you have completed the job, allow 4 to 6 weeks if you are concreting them in place before you start hitting the pavers with a pressure washer, allowing time to cure.
Roger Oakley BDA(Europe)Member 2006
R&A Pressure Washing Services Ltd
info@rapressurewashing.co.uk
www.rapressurewashing.co.uk
R&A Pressure Washing Services Ltd
info@rapressurewashing.co.uk
www.rapressurewashing.co.uk
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- Posts: 101
- Joined: Sun Jun 10, 2012 8:08 pm
- Location: sunny scotland