Mark Dadian
New Member
Looking for opinions on this topic.
I talked with a man who has been in the brick business 20 years. When I asked him what I should wash Eff with, he replied, "Scrub it with a bruch and leave it alone. If you add water to it you'll just bring back the eff 10 times worse than it currently is."
He went on to say that it mostly appears on new work or tuck pointing, and in about 18 mos it should resolve itself. I almost argued this point when I realized that one of my potential projects is over 50 years old, but then remembered that where the eff is coming out is where the brick has just been recently exposed to the elements.
Soooo... what do you think?
I talked with a man who has been in the brick business 20 years. When I asked him what I should wash Eff with, he replied, "Scrub it with a bruch and leave it alone. If you add water to it you'll just bring back the eff 10 times worse than it currently is."
He went on to say that it mostly appears on new work or tuck pointing, and in about 18 mos it should resolve itself. I almost argued this point when I realized that one of my potential projects is over 50 years old, but then remembered that where the eff is coming out is where the brick has just been recently exposed to the elements.
Soooo... what do you think?