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9kckzqii3

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About 9kckzqii3

  • Rank
    TGS Newbie
  • Birthday 11/28/1965

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  • Company Name
    NA
  • First & Last Name
    H Moy
  • City & State
    San Jose
  • Occupation
    unemployed
  1. Tried 0.3% Oxalic and noticed no improvement. Next tried 2% oxalic -- and it worked! Now wood looks brightened up and really nice! BTW, I wonder if I can rinse *after* applying percarbonate and oxalic (saving one-step of rinsing): - pre-wet wood - apply percarbonate - apply oxalic acid (to brighten/neutralize percarbonate) - rinse Also, I'm curious--would household vinegar (5% acetic acid) also work as neutralizer/brightener after applying percarbonate? The reason I ask is that household vinegar is economical and readily available, and if the 5% concentration acetic acid is appropriate, there is no need to dilute -- just pour and spray. There're also a couple of areas (like the top of the gate) where after all these still appear milky/light grayish. Do I need to reapply more oxalic acid, or reapply percarbonate? Thanks.
  2. Hello Hows it going?

  3. Hi, thx for the info. Looks like percarbonate is not pH neutral. BTW, wonder what concentration of oxalic acid (brightener) I should use? I am seeing these products: Zep Deck Cleaner Concentrate (6% oxalic) : to be diluted up to 20 times Behr Brightener No. 63 1 gallon (5-10% oxalic) : to be diluted to 5 gallons Thompson's Deck Brightener (6% oxalic acid) : no dilution required Seems when diluted it'd only have 2% concentration of oxalic for Behr and 0.3% for 20 times dilution for Zep. Are these figures too low? Thompson's has 6% oxalic and not instructed to be diluted. So I'm a little confused here. Thanks.
  4. I'm trying to understand--if percarb is close to pH neutral, why would it darken the wood? What is it exactly doing to the wood that darkens the color? Thx... .
  5. First time using percarbonate, is oxalic acid always needed after applying percarbonate? If the right amount of percarbonate was sprayed on the wood then no need to neutralize the percarbonate? Thx.
  6. Saturday May 28

    8:00 - 8:30 Attendee

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    8:30 - 12:00 Guest speakers

    12:00 - 1:00 Lunch catered by Shack in the Back BarBQ

    1:00 - 5:00 Roundtable discussion

    Sunday May 29

    8:30 - 12:00 Live demos to include:

    Wood cleaning & brightening

    Fleet washing

    Siding & gutter cleaning

    Wet sandblasting

    Sirocco vacuum recovery surface cleaning

    Best rig contest judging

    12:00 - 1:00 Lunch

    1:00 - 3:00 Skid giveaway, Best rig contest award, Q&A session, wrap up

    www.pressurewashinginstitute.com

  7. Thx for the info. Also I noticed as I ran the power washer to rinse off the percarbonate, tannic acid (dark brown) was leeching out and dripping. At other times, the dripping was in pale green after I scrubbed the wood surface. Is this normal?
  8. Hi there, I have an old redwood fence that hasn't been cleaned up for a good 5 years. The fence looks dull grayish. Last weekend I decided to do a good cleanup. I used percarbonate solution, prewet the surface briefly, applied it with a garden sprayer, and rinsed it off with a power washer (@ medium pressure). As it dried up, the fence wood appeared brownish in color. I thought it needed a 2nd application. I reapplied. As it dried up again, the wood color was lightened up a bit, so I was pleased. The day afterward, the wood started to look pale greenish. Would anyone know what this is? Tannins from the redwood? I wonder what I can do now to clear up the pale greenish color on the redwood? Thanks.
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