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Solid stain vs. paint
My condo development has had problems with rotting wood siding on the
buildings. I'm told this was due to the quality of the wood being poor. The Association has always been using solid colored stain instead of paint. The stuff, to me looks like just like paint, but my understanding is that, because it is classified as a stain, only one coat of the stuff needs to be applied, and without any primer. For this reason, I'm wondering if the use of a solid colored stain instead of paint might contributing to the wood rotting. Would properly applying one coat of a quality solid-colored stain provide as much protection as if the building were properly painted (which I assume would entail a primer plus 2 coats of quality paint). Am I wrong to be suspecting that solid colored stain is being chosen as a means of saving money....I'm imagining them saying.... "solid colored stain is great because we can just apply ONE coat of stain and be done with it rather than having to pay for the labor of applying....oh my god.... a primer plus....oh my god.... two....yes two.....coats of paint." Am I wrong to be thinking that the buildings would be better protected if properly painted rather than stained. J. |
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