I wrapped up this job Friday. The job was posted in the help wanted/job leads forum from Ken Fenner. The job consisted of power washing 8 small cedar shake roofs atop 8 stone towers. I decided to use wood tux wet, as the job is a little over an hour away from me. This was my first time using wood tux wet, and I have mixed opinions about the product. My first call to order the product was through ESI, I called and could not get a answer of when my order might possibly ship to me, so I decided not to order through ESI. I then called Sunbrite Supply of Georgia, and placed my order online (over $500) and recieved free shipping. Everything I ordered came, except the wood-tux wet. I waited a couple days, figuring ups would bring it in a day or two. After a couple days, I called Sunbrite asking when/where the wood tux I ordered was, and they told me I wasn't getting it, because they were having problems recieving it from ESI. The person at Sunbrite was very nice to me, and explained everything, and went on to refund my money. He told me they are done selling wood tux and any of ESI products. Well anyway, this whole episode just trying to get wood tux delayed the job, and I ended up buying a 5 gal pail through Ken. Thanks Ken for all your help with this job! I washed the roofs using efc-38, then brightened with citralic, then stained with wood tux wet, tinted a little darker.
Overall, I think the job went well, took a little longer than expected, got chased away by thunderstorms. Wood tux is definitly a different product to use. I brushed most of the job. Wood tux wet goes on as a mustard color, then changes to the actual color. I am used to applying Ready Seal, so this was totally different. I used aprox 3-4 gallons of stain on this job, and went through 350 gallons of water while pressure washing. Tell me what you think of the results.
Again, I have to thank Ken, not only for giving me the job, but for selling me a pail of wood tux from his own inventory, dropping the pail off at the job, and helping me with tinting the stain and any other questions I had. Thanks Ken.
I wrapped up this job Friday. The job was posted in the help wanted/job leads forum from Ken Fenner. The job consisted of power washing 8 small cedar shake roofs atop 8 stone towers. I decided to use wood tux wet, as the job is a little over an hour away from me. This was my first time using wood tux wet, and I have mixed opinions about the product. My first call to order the product was through ESI, I called and could not get a answer of when my order might possibly ship to me, so I decided not to order through ESI. I then called Sunbrite Supply of Georgia, and placed my order online (over $500) and recieved free shipping. Everything I ordered came, except the wood-tux wet. I waited a couple days, figuring ups would bring it in a day or two. After a couple days, I called Sunbrite asking when/where the wood tux I ordered was, and they told me I wasn't getting it, because they were having problems recieving it from ESI. The person at Sunbrite was very nice to me, and explained everything, and went on to refund my money. He told me they are done selling wood tux and any of ESI products. Well anyway, this whole episode just trying to get wood tux delayed the job, and I ended up buying a 5 gal pail through Ken. Thanks Ken for all your help with this job! I washed the roofs using efc-38, then brightened with citralic, then stained with wood tux wet, tinted a little darker.
Overall, I think the job went well, took a little longer than expected, got chased away by thunderstorms. Wood tux is definitly a different product to use. I brushed most of the job. Wood tux wet goes on as a mustard color, then changes to the actual color. I am used to applying Ready Seal, so this was totally different. I used aprox 3-4 gallons of stain on this job, and went through 350 gallons of water while pressure washing. Tell me what you think of the results.
Again, I have to thank Ken, not only for giving me the job, but for selling me a pail of wood tux from his own inventory, dropping the pail off at the job, and helping me with tinting the stain and any other questions I had. Thanks Ken.
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