| | |
|
|
|
Re: refurbish quarry tiles |
| message from The Natural Philosopher on 21 May 2004 |
Dunk em in brick acid.
scrub wash.
Dunkl in strong organic solvent
Scrub wash.
|
| Christian McArdle replied to The Natural Philosopher on 21 May 2004 |
If you can't find brick acid (I could only find crappy water based
replacements that were about as effective as fairy liquid), Lithofin Cement
Away is an extremely effective equivalent. Did wonders for my toilet bowl.
Lithofin KF Cement Residue Remover is similar, but probably a little milder
for use indoors.
In Lithofin-speak, this is probably something like Lithofin WEXA.
Christian.
P.S. I'm not really the Lithofin marketing manager, honest!
|
| Andy Hall replied to Christian McArdle on 21 May 2004 |
B&Q used to have it, but no longer, as far as I could find.
You can get it from BuilderCenter.......
I think that their products are really good as well, and so so most
people that have used them.
Now about that new pyramid franchise........
.andy
To email, substitute .nospam with .gl
|
| Christian McArdle replied to Christian McArdle on 21 May 2004 |
Presumably leave in some sort of solvent. I'll guess Cellulose thinners.
Leave in a vat of brick acid?
Christian.
|
| stuart noble replied to Christian McArdle on 21 May 2004 |
Alkali only affects organic material, which would exclude a lot of waxes.
The only grease I can think of that might respond to citsuac ados would be
lanolin
|
|
Archived message: Re: refurbish quarry tiles (UK D-I-Y Home Renovation)