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Puddin' Man
March 1st 05, 08:13 PM
Re: Prep/Re-caulk bathtub

'allo,

Apologies for the FAQ: what little I knew of proper surface-prep
/caulking I likely forgot years ago.

I think I've got a pretty much standard tiled bath/shower
such as was commonly installed in the midwest in the 50's.

Tub was caulked maybe 15 years ago. There is black stuff,
presumably mildew, *under* the caulk. Spraying with anti-
mildew cleaners has no effect. I'm thinking the surface-
prep was insufficient, wish to avoid such when I re-caulk.

I've been looking at:


http://www.gesealants.com/sealants/diy/whatsnew/pressreleases/recaulktands.shtml

just to get an idea of what I'm up against. :-)

What might I need to do to get a proper prep/re-caulk job
done on a bathtub? What is caulk remover? Are the steps
on the GE site a good outline of what needs be done?

TIA,
Puddin'

************************************************** ****
*** Puddin' Man PuddingDotMan at GmailDotCom ***
************************************************** ****;

Dorothy Roper
March 1st 05, 10:44 PM
The GE web site is interesting. I have scraped out a lot of caulk but I
have never even heard of caulk remover. If you find any please post to this
board...sure would love to have some.

What I did was take a razor blade and putty knife and scrape out what I
could - cut out what I couldn't scrape - cleaned with alcohol when I
finished. This was silicon caulk. The older kind is a little different but
think you do it the same way. Be sure to clean with Clorox when you finish.






"Puddin' Man" > wrote in message
...
> Re: Prep/Re-caulk bathtub
>
> 'allo,
>
> Apologies for the FAQ: what little I knew of proper surface-prep
> /caulking I likely forgot years ago.
>
> I think I've got a pretty much standard tiled bath/shower
> such as was commonly installed in the midwest in the 50's.
>
> Tub was caulked maybe 15 years ago. There is black stuff,
> presumably mildew, *under* the caulk. Spraying with anti-
> mildew cleaners has no effect. I'm thinking the surface-
> prep was insufficient, wish to avoid such when I re-caulk.
>
> I've been looking at:
>
>
>
http://www.gesealants.com/sealants/diy/whatsnew/pressreleases/recaulktands.s
html
>
> just to get an idea of what I'm up against. :-)
>
> What might I need to do to get a proper prep/re-caulk job
> done on a bathtub? What is caulk remover? Are the steps
> on the GE site a good outline of what needs be done?
>
> TIA,
> Puddin'
>
> ************************************************** ****
> *** Puddin' Man PuddingDotMan at GmailDotCom ***
> ************************************************** ****;

John Harlow
March 2nd 05, 05:03 AM
> I've been looking at:
>
>
> http://www.gesealants.com/sealants/diy/whatsnew/pressreleases/recaulktands.shtml
>
> just to get an idea of what I'm up against. :-)

Allow me to insert the following step:

6.5 - Observe that your new caulk application looks like hell. You had a
hard time getting an even bead on and now in your attempt to "smooth" it
with a wet finger it's smeared all over the tub.

6.6 - jump to step 2. Repeat steps several times until you finally get it
to where it doesn't look like a pigeon took a dump on your bathtub.

Mikepier
March 2nd 05, 12:53 PM
Use masking tape to prevent overcaulking

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