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[email protected] November 27th 07 05:10 PM

How do I seal off adhesive (fumes) on concrete
 
I had carpet laid in a room addition (den) with wide concrete steps.
The carpet layer plastered the steps with a very slow drying adhesive
that looked like contact cement. It wasn't your normal carpet padding
cement though - it was still wet months after installation and almost
a year later it's still offgassing quite a bit. Anyway, I became
sensitized to it and need a method to seal it off somehow. I was
thinking of polyester/epoxy resin but maybe that would be too hard a
finish and would have some offgassing as well. Is there a low VOC
product out there that I can brush or roll on?

ransley November 27th 07 05:33 PM

How do I seal off adhesive (fumes) on concrete
 
On Nov 27, 11:10 am, wrote:
I had carpet laid in a room addition (den) with wide concrete steps.
The carpet layer plastered the steps with a very slow drying adhesive
that looked like contact cement. It wasn't your normal carpet padding
cement though - it was still wet months after installation and almost
a year later it's still offgassing quite a bit. Anyway, I became
sensitized to it and need a method to seal it off somehow. I was
thinking of polyester/epoxy resin but maybe that would be too hard a
finish and would have some offgassing as well. Is there a low VOC
product out there that I can brush or roll on?


You want to coat the carpet with epoxy?. If it still bothers you
removing the carpet and glue sounds logical.

JoeSpareBedroom November 27th 07 05:54 PM

How do I seal off adhesive (fumes) on concrete
 
"ransley" wrote in message
...
On Nov 27, 11:10 am, wrote:
I had carpet laid in a room addition (den) with wide concrete steps.
The carpet layer plastered the steps with a very slow drying adhesive
that looked like contact cement. It wasn't your normal carpet padding
cement though - it was still wet months after installation and almost
a year later it's still offgassing quite a bit. Anyway, I became
sensitized to it and need a method to seal it off somehow. I was
thinking of polyester/epoxy resin but maybe that would be too hard a
finish and would have some offgassing as well. Is there a low VOC
product out there that I can brush or roll on?


You want to coat the carpet with epoxy?. If it still bothers you
removing the carpet and glue sounds logical.



Yeah. And tracking down the installer, getting full details about the
adhesive, and calling the manufacturer to find out the best way to remove
it. Sounds to me like the installer used the wrong product.



[email protected] November 27th 07 06:45 PM

How do I seal off adhesive (fumes) on concrete
 
On Nov 27, 9:54 am, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote:
"ransley" wrote in message

...

On Nov 27, 11:10 am, wrote:
I had carpet laid in a room addition (den) with wide concrete steps.
The carpet layer plastered the steps with a very slow drying adhesive
that looked like contact cement. It wasn't your normal carpet padding
cement though - it was still wet months after installation and almost
a year later it's still offgassing quite a bit. Anyway, I became
sensitized to it and need a method to seal it off somehow. I was
thinking of polyester/epoxy resin but maybe that would be too hard a
finish and would have some offgassing as well. Is there a low VOC
product out there that I can brush or roll on?


You want to coat the carpet with epoxy?. If it still bothers you
removing the carpet and glue sounds logical.


Yeah. And tracking down the installer, getting full details about the
adhesive, and calling the manufacturer to find out the best way to remove
it. Sounds to me like the installer used the wrong product.


It's just bare concret now - with lots of adhesive soaked in. The guy
poured it on the front portions of the steps to stick the padding to.
Couldn't get any info from the idiot. I think it was stuff he picked
up on the side for cheap so he just played dumb when I confronted him.
Carpet company was no help either. I tried fans for 3 months, then
heaters for 3 months and even tried UV reptile lamps for a couple of
weeks but not much change in gassing. There was some pieces of
adhesive soaked padding still stuck to the carpet that came off the
steps. I threw it in the garage where it was just in the sunlight.
Couldn't get within 5 feet of it for a few days because it burned my
nose and lungs but then suddenly it was dry with no outgassing. Thats
what got me thinking about UV. Took about 9 months to get tack free
inside but even after almost a year the fumes are still a problem.

Norminn November 27th 07 07:05 PM

How do I seal off adhesive (fumes) on concrete
 
JoeSpareBedroom wrote:

"ransley" wrote in message
...


On Nov 27, 11:10 am, wrote:


I had carpet laid in a room addition (den) with wide concrete steps.
The carpet layer plastered the steps with a very slow drying adhesive
that looked like contact cement. It wasn't your normal carpet padding
cement though - it was still wet months after installation and almost
a year later it's still offgassing quite a bit. Anyway, I became
sensitized to it and need a method to seal it off somehow. I was
thinking of polyester/epoxy resin but maybe that would be too hard a
finish and would have some offgassing as well. Is there a low VOC
product out there that I can brush or roll on?


You want to coat the carpet with epoxy?. If it still bothers you
removing the carpet and glue sounds logical.




Yeah. And tracking down the installer, getting full details about the
adhesive, and calling the manufacturer to find out the best way to remove
it. Sounds to me like the installer used the wrong product.




The installer should be able to give you information about the
adhesive. I'll bet an attorney could convince him. Your city building
department may be able also, or may be able to test for the type of
fumes giving you trouble. I would not fool around any longer without
taking some action to protect yourself and your home. I would also use
fans, assuming the stuff isn't flammable, to exhaust air from that room
as much as possible and hopefully help hasten curing.

JoeSpareBedroom November 27th 07 07:10 PM

How do I seal off adhesive (fumes) on concrete
 
wrote in message
...
On Nov 27, 9:54 am, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote:
"ransley" wrote in message

...

On Nov 27, 11:10 am, wrote:
I had carpet laid in a room addition (den) with wide concrete steps.
The carpet layer plastered the steps with a very slow drying adhesive
that looked like contact cement. It wasn't your normal carpet padding
cement though - it was still wet months after installation and almost
a year later it's still offgassing quite a bit. Anyway, I became
sensitized to it and need a method to seal it off somehow. I was
thinking of polyester/epoxy resin but maybe that would be too hard a
finish and would have some offgassing as well. Is there a low VOC
product out there that I can brush or roll on?


You want to coat the carpet with epoxy?. If it still bothers you
removing the carpet and glue sounds logical.


Yeah. And tracking down the installer, getting full details about the
adhesive, and calling the manufacturer to find out the best way to remove
it. Sounds to me like the installer used the wrong product.


It's just bare concret now - with lots of adhesive soaked in. The guy
poured it on the front portions of the steps to stick the padding to.
Couldn't get any info from the idiot. I think it was stuff he picked
up on the side for cheap so he just played dumb when I confronted him.
Carpet company was no help either. I tried fans for 3 months, then
heaters for 3 months and even tried UV reptile lamps for a couple of
weeks but not much change in gassing. There was some pieces of
adhesive soaked padding still stuck to the carpet that came off the
steps. I threw it in the garage where it was just in the sunlight.
Couldn't get within 5 feet of it for a few days because it burned my
nose and lungs but then suddenly it was dry with no outgassing. Thats
what got me thinking about UV. Took about 9 months to get tack free
inside but even after almost a year the fumes are still a problem.



I think I already know the answer, but did you check to see if this
installer was insured? If yes, you may have recourse: New concrete, paid for
by his insurance company.




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