Grout that’s been hardened on brick what should I clean it off with. I’ve tried using just water and it leaves a white spot where the grout is still at? I can’t use high pressure or it just blows the grout out.
I have the Same issue, I had a brick layer do a sloppy job on my House 12 months ago. now i need to figure out a way to fix it so it looks half decent.
@@jobber1984 Muriatic Acid should do the trick. If there are huge globs, you can use a wire brush. If you have globs as in the grout joints, try chipping them away. If you chip inside the grout joint, outwards, you risk messing up the joint, if you chip from the outside, you risk blowing out the edge of the brick. I usually go from the inside at minimal angle, and usually parallel with the joint. GL
I didn't think you were supposed to seal brick because then you'd lock in the salts. They'd come to the surface but get locked below the sealant, and be more white. This is contrary to what I've always been told.
cleaners that penetrate a dry wall can cause efflorescence. You pre-soak the wall to keep cleaners working on the surface and not going into the brick.
Thank you👍!
Grout that’s been hardened on brick what should I clean it off with. I’ve tried using just water and it leaves a white spot where the grout is still at? I can’t use high pressure or it just blows the grout out.
I have the Same issue, I had a brick layer do a sloppy job on my House 12 months ago. now i need to figure out a way to fix it so it looks half decent.
mike c try some muriatic acid. I haven’t tried it personally but I was told this stuff will work
@@jobber1984 Muriatic Acid should do the trick. If there are huge globs, you can use a wire brush. If you have globs as in the grout joints, try chipping them away. If you chip inside the grout joint, outwards, you risk messing up the joint, if you chip from the outside, you risk blowing out the edge of the brick. I usually go from the inside at minimal angle, and usually parallel with the joint. GL
@@LightGesture many many globs. Appreciate the comment. Very good advice
use Hydrochloric Acid, / mortar stain remover- remember to follow Manuf instructions!
I didn't think you were supposed to seal brick because then you'd lock in the salts. They'd come to the surface but get locked below the sealant, and be more white. This is contrary to what I've always been told.
Some treatments made to repel water don't seal the surface.
@@PaddleDogC5that literally makes no sense
Soaking bricks in water releases salts out of the brick
cleaners that penetrate a dry wall can cause efflorescence. You pre-soak the wall to keep cleaners working on the surface and not going into the brick.