Jump to content
  • 0
Sign in to follow this  
Gutter Squad

Oxidation on vinyl siding

Question

Have a home with medium slate blue vinyl siding that I washed yesterday (the siding is about 22 years old - the owner has not had it washed and has been at the residence for 19 years). The siding came clean, but there is a layer or patina of oxidation on it (kind of like the kind that gets on cheap vinyl outdoor furniture after a number of years).

Any thoughts on getting this "patina" off the siding. Homeowner is happy with the cleaning, but I'd like it to look better. Did a scratch test with my fingernail on one side and found that there seems to be a glossier "hard" layer beneath the oxidized patina.

Thoughts appreciated - considering just taking a stiff bristle to it...

Edited by Gutter Squad
additional info

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

35 answers to this question

Recommended Posts

  • 0

In ten years I have only seen two or three houses that this happens to, and all of them have been light blue or slate colored.

In the past I used a bleach and detergent mix, nothing fancy, and rinsed with little to no pressure. It is the pressure the may remove some of the oxidation and leave the splotchy apperance.

Recently I have stopped using bleach and now use percarbonate based cleaners which are much more eco friendly, non toxic, and non-corrosive. I did have a problem with it removing some oxidation but not all of it, and it left that splotchy look. I did not notice it until it had dried. I have not yet tried to correct this problem because the customer knew ahead of time this problem might occur. I had informed her before of the ptotenial for this happening because of the age of the siding and effects of the sun over a period of many years.

I am not sure what I will do, but high pressure is NOT the way to go. I will either reclean with same cleaner or brush it off. I know -- some of you think I am crazy for brushing, but it works, it deoesn't take much longer, and customers appreciate the extra effort.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
  • 0

that sounds like exaclty the scenario I had. Gray siding had some white streaks in it. I tried purple stuff to remove and it didn't work. I turned out to be some of the paint from the facia boards that the purple stuff removes in cleaning had dried back on to the vinyl as the house dripped some water from the weep holes in the siding. When we walked the house with the homwowner there was NO streaks . she paid and we left. Her comments were "wow I can't believe how clean everything looks". then the call came later that night that the streaks appeared. As the weep holes bled some remaining water that contained some of thewhite residue it dried on the gray siding I found that 20 to 1 HD-80 or 5 to 1 briteside removed the dried on white stains .

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
  • 0

I have to agree - a double wide manufactured vinyl sided home takes us about 1 1/2 hours and that's including an interior screenroom and driveway

You shouldn't be using high pressure on vinyl, nor should one side of a typical house take an hour unless you're hand scrubbing it! The proper chems and you can wash a vinyl house in an hour with a garden hose. And yes, get it clean.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
  • 0

For the folks that are using the over the counter bleach at 6 percent. Do you add water to your 5 er or do you run it pure and let it mix with water as your down streaming? Because my draw is 12 to 1 and if I run it pure in a 5 er with some simple cherry I should be good right?

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
  • 0

So Rick are you saying it's better to not mix the bleach with water to just inject it from a bucket uncut?

(only when down streaming of course)

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now

Sign in to follow this  

×