Mud Stains On Stucco?

chris moore

New Member
What do you guys use to remove red mud stains from the foundation of a house ? The bottom part of the house is stucco its not colored. They have lived there about ten years and never had it clean. Have not tried anything yet.Would pure 12.5% bleach work? THANKS, CHRIS
 

PressurePros

New Member
Your mud is different down south than what we see up here. There is a compound callled dihydrogen monoxide which takes care of our mud issues most of the time.

If you have remaining mineral staining you are looking at usinf an acid to restore the stucco. Be careful.
 

PressurePros

New Member
DM can be misused and the consequences can be fatal.

I had a buddy that was drinking all day and he thought it would be funny to douse me with the stuff. After coughing and sputtering and trying to get it out of my eyes, I found it hard to breathe. After I got myself together I picked him up and threw him into the largest concentration of it in the world.. the ocean ;-) Di=2 Mono=1 dihydrogen monoxide = H20
 

Mark

Moderator / Sponsor
Dihydrogen monoxide hoax

:rolleyes: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dihydrogen_monoxide_hoax [wsmile]

Dihydrogen monoxide hoax
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The logo of DHMo_Org, primary current residence of the dihydrogen monoxide hoaxDihydrogen monoxide (DHMO) is a scientific name for water that is relatively unknown to most of the public, used in hoaxes that illustrate how the lack of scientific knowledge and an exaggerated analysis can lead to misplaced fears. "Di" meaning two, and "Mono" meaning single, describes how water is made up of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom (H2O).

The hoax involves listing strictly negative effects of water, such as erosion or drowning, attributing them to "dihydrogen monoxide", and then asking individuals to help control the seemingly dangerous substance. The negative aspects, while real, are disguised from their more commonly known forms.

It was apparently created by Eric Lechner, Lars Norpchen and Matthew Kaufman (housemates while attending UC Santa Cruz in 1989), revised by Craig Jackson in 1994, and brought to widespread public attention in 1997, when Nathan Zohner, a 14-year-old student, gathered petitions to ban "DHMO" as the basis of his science project, titled "How Gullible Are We?"[1]
 

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