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#1
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
For decades I've read that when washing walls, start at the bottom, and I've never understood it. Now I have to wash a wall, and I need someone to explain it to me, to convince me that that is the proper way. Seems to me if you start at the bottom and get it clean, there will be dirt running down the wall onto the clean part as soon as I get the part above it wet. And I'll have to clean the bottom parts over and over again. Helpful advice appreciated. |
#2
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
On 2/28/2011 10:52 PM mm spake thus:
Wash walls from bottom up or top down?? For decades I've read that when washing walls, start at the bottom, and I've never understood it. Now I have to wash a wall, and I need someone to explain it to me, to convince me that that is the proper way. Seems to me if you start at the bottom and get it clean, there will be dirt running down the wall onto the clean part as soon as I get the part above it wet. And I'll have to clean the bottom parts over and over again. Helpful advice appreciated. I think you've got washing walls confused with shingling roofs. Shingling roof: start at the bottom and work your way up. Washing wall: start at the top. -- The phrase "jump the shark" itself jumped the shark about a decade ago. - Usenet |
#3
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
On 3/1/2011 1:01 AM, David Nebenzahl wrote:
On 2/28/2011 10:52 PM mm spake thus: Wash walls from bottom up or top down?? For decades I've read that when washing walls, start at the bottom, and I've never understood it. Now I have to wash a wall, and I need someone to explain it to me, to convince me that that is the proper way. Seems to me if you start at the bottom and get it clean, there will be dirt running down the wall onto the clean part as soon as I get the part above it wet. And I'll have to clean the bottom parts over and over again. Helpful advice appreciated. I think you've got washing walls confused with shingling roofs. Shingling roof: start at the bottom and work your way up. Washing wall: start at the top. When you take a shower, where do you start, top or bottom? ^_^ TDD |
#4
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
On Tue, 01 Mar 2011 01:52:39 -0500, mm
wrote: Wash walls from bottom up or top down?? For decades I've read that when washing walls, start at the bottom, and I've never understood it. Now I have to wash a wall, and I need someone to explain it to me, to convince me that that is the proper way. Seems to me if you start at the bottom and get it clean, there will be dirt running down the wall onto the clean part as soon as I get the part above it wet. And I'll have to clean the bottom parts over and over again. Helpful advice appreciated. http://webcache.googleusercontent.co...www.google.com "Just about every book we've read on the subject, and every person we've ever talked to, says to wash walls from the bottom up." However this guy goes on to say he prefers from the top down, and two or three others say the same thing. That's what I wanted to do in the first place, so I will. But like he says, everything *I* ever read before tonight said from the bottom up. Thanks. |
#5
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
The explaination I heard. I don't believe it, but here's how
it went. Washing top to bottom, the water running down into the dirty wall mixes with the dirt, and makes a mixture that's hard to clean off. When washing bottom up, it's really easy to see the drips, and wipe them off the clean area. I was told that by a woman, years ago. I don't think that makes sense. Me, I'd clean from top to bottom. That way I don't have dribbles messing up the clean area I just did. -- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. "mm" wrote in message ... Wash walls from bottom up or top down?? For decades I've read that when washing walls, start at the bottom, and I've never understood it. Now I have to wash a wall, and I need someone to explain it to me, to convince me that that is the proper way. Seems to me if you start at the bottom and get it clean, there will be dirt running down the wall onto the clean part as soon as I get the part above it wet. And I'll have to clean the bottom parts over and over again. Helpful advice appreciated. |
#6
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
mm wrote:
Wash walls from bottom up or top down?? I always go from top to bottom. [Disclaimer; 90% of the time I'm just prepping for a paint job.] For decades I've read that when washing walls, start at the bottom, and I've never understood it. Pure theory here-- If you start at the bottom, it will be easy to see when the drips from where you are washing start to be clear, indicating that your wall is really clean. Now I have to wash a wall, and I need someone to explain it to me, to convince me that that is the proper way. Seems to me if you start at the bottom and get it clean, there will be dirt running down the wall onto the clean part as soon as I get the part above it wet. And I'll have to clean the bottom parts over and over again. Do one wall from the bottom up. Do another from the top down. Does one seem easier? Ask your most honest friend to tell you which wall looks better. I'd never heard of washing from the bottom up-- but I'd be interested in the results. Jim |
#7
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
On 3/1/2011 7:28 AM, Stormin Mormon wrote:
The explaination I heard. I don't believe it, but here's how it went. Washing top to bottom, the water running down into the dirty wall mixes with the dirt, and makes a mixture that's hard to clean off. When washing bottom up, it's really easy to see the drips, and wipe them off the clean area. I was told that by a woman, years ago. I don't think that makes sense. Me, I'd clean from top to bottom. That way I don't have dribbles messing up the clean area I just did. This is exactly what my mother used to say and do when she lived in a house located in a very dirty factory area. In this house, 1 year and the walls were filthy. One wipe of the rag or sponge, and you could literally see a major color change. She always said that if the dirty water drips on the already clean area, you can easily wipe it clean. However, my houses have been in relatively clean environments, so I really don't think it makes a difference in my case. |
#8
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
mm wrote in
: Wash walls from bottom up or top down?? For decades I've read that when washing walls, start at the bottom, and I've never understood it. Now I have to wash a wall, and I need someone to explain it to me, to convince me that that is the proper way. Seems to me if you start at the bottom and get it clean, there will be dirt running down the wall onto the clean part as soon as I get the part above it wet. And I'll have to clean the bottom parts over and over again. Helpful advice appreciated. Oh boy. Here we go. Outlet ground pin up or down... |
#9
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
WD-40 is a lubricant. Everyone knows that.
-- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. "Red Green" wrote in message ... Seems to me if you start at the bottom and get it clean, there will be dirt running down the wall onto the clean part as soon as I get the part above it wet. And I'll have to clean the bottom parts over and over again. Helpful advice appreciated. Oh boy. Here we go. Outlet ground pin up or down... |
#10
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
On Tue, 01 Mar 2011 08:20:54 -0500, Jim Elbrecht
wrote: mm wrote: Wash walls from bottom up or top down?? I always go from top to bottom. [Disclaimer; 90% of the time I'm just prepping for a paint job.] For decades I've read that when washing walls, start at the bottom, and I've never understood it. Pure theory here-- If you start at the bottom, it will be easy to see when the drips from where you are washing start to be clear, indicating that your wall is really clean. Now I have to wash a wall, and I need someone to explain it to me, to convince me that that is the proper way. Seems to me if you start at the bottom and get it clean, there will be dirt running down the wall onto the clean part as soon as I get the part above it wet. And I'll have to clean the bottom parts over and over again. Do one wall from the bottom up. Do another from the top down. Does one seem easier? Ask your most honest friend to tell you which wall looks better. A good idea. At the moment, I have less than 2 feet of one wall to do, but it reminded me of the question. But later I'll be doing more. And I ruined this test by doing the part of the wall in the middle, that didn't need a step stool; and I didn't do the bottom because it's covered by the stove and I can't get to it until the stove is out. I got myself a new (to me) harvest gold stove, and I'm just cleaning where it will go. I'd never heard of washing from the bottom up-- but I'd be interested in the results. Jim Thanks for all the suggestions. I'll decide later, when I start to paint more of the house. |
#11
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
On Mar 1, 6:37*am, Red Green wrote:
mm wrote : Wash walls from bottom up or top down?? For decades I've read that when washing walls, start at the bottom, and I've never understood it. Now I have to wash a wall, and I need someone to explain it to me, to convince me that that is the proper way. Seems to me if you start at the bottom and get it clean, there will be dirt running down the wall onto the clean part as soon as I get the part above it wet. *And I'll have to clean the bottom parts over and over again. Helpful advice appreciated. Oh boy. Here we go. Outlet ground pin up or down... I satisfied everyone, I put mine sideways Harry K |
#12
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
On Mar 1, 1:52*am, mm wrote:
Wash walls from bottom up or top down?? For decades I've read that when washing walls, start at the bottom, and I've never understood it. Now I have to wash a wall, and I need someone to explain it to me, to convince me that that is the proper way. Seems to me if you start at the bottom and get it clean, there will be dirt running down the wall onto the clean part as soon as I get the part above it wet. *And I'll have to clean the bottom parts over and over again. Helpful advice appreciated. Start washing you will figure it out in about 5 minutes. Jimmie |
#13
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
On Mar 1, 12:52*am, mm wrote:
Wash walls from bottom up or top down?? For decades I've read that when washing walls, start at the bottom, and I've never understood it. Now I have to wash a wall, and I need someone to explain it to me, to convince me that that is the proper way. Seems to me if you start at the bottom and get it clean, there will be dirt running down the wall onto the clean part as soon as I get the part above it wet. *And I'll have to clean the bottom parts over and over again. Helpful advice appreciated. I never like to do anything more than once. (With respect to cleaning something.) Cleaning from the top down means that I don't have to go back over an area that I have already cleaned because of dirty water / cleaning solution running down on an already clean area. If I am doing a wall, the last thing I want to have to do is get down off my ladder to reclean an area that I have already done. I don't know where you read the clean from the bottom up but it goes against everything I have ever heard, seen, or logically concieved. |
#14
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
On Mar 1, 12:52*am, mm wrote:
Wash walls from bottom up or top down?? For decades I've read that when washing walls, start at the bottom, and I've never understood it. Now I have to wash a wall, and I need someone to explain it to me, to convince me that that is the proper way. Seems to me if you start at the bottom and get it clean, there will be dirt running down the wall onto the clean part as soon as I get the part above it wet. *And I'll have to clean the bottom parts over and over again. Helpful advice appreciated. Why wash it at all? Just paint right over it. No one will be the wiser. Joe |
#15
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
In article ,
mm wrote: I got myself a new (to me) harvest gold stove, and I'm just cleaning where it will go. So does it match the fridge? I didn't see the last of that thread. |
#16
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
On 3/1/2011 12:52 AM, mm wrote:
Wash walls from bottom up or top down?? For decades I've read that when washing walls, start at the bottom, and I've never understood it. Now I have to wash a wall, and I need someone to explain it to me, to convince me that that is the proper way. Seems to me if you start at the bottom and get it clean, there will be dirt running down the wall onto the clean part as soon as I get the part above it wet. And I'll have to clean the bottom parts over and over again. Helpful advice appreciated. Same as cars. Wash from the bottom up, rinse from the top down. you can't see where you've been washing if you get the whole thing wet by starting at the top. -- Steve Barker remove the "not" from my address to email |
#17
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
On 3/1/2011 8:37 AM, Red Green wrote:
wrote in : Wash walls from bottom up or top down?? For decades I've read that when washing walls, start at the bottom, and I've never understood it. Now I have to wash a wall, and I need someone to explain it to me, to convince me that that is the proper way. Seems to me if you start at the bottom and get it clean, there will be dirt running down the wall onto the clean part as soon as I get the part above it wet. And I'll have to clean the bottom parts over and over again. Helpful advice appreciated. Oh boy. Here we go. Outlet ground pin up or down... Down of course. Up looks stupid and doesn't fit 90 degree cords. -- Steve Barker remove the "not" from my address to email |
#18
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
On 3/1/2011 8:39 AM, Stormin Mormon wrote:
WD-40 is a lubricant. Everyone knows that. since it's basically kerosene... no it's not. -- Steve Barker remove the "not" from my address to email |
#19
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
On 3/1/2011 11:46 AM, Joe wrote:
On Mar 1, 12:52 am, wrote: Wash walls from bottom up or top down?? For decades I've read that when washing walls, start at the bottom, and I've never understood it. Now I have to wash a wall, and I need someone to explain it to me, to convince me that that is the proper way. Seems to me if you start at the bottom and get it clean, there will be dirt running down the wall onto the clean part as soon as I get the part above it wet. And I'll have to clean the bottom parts over and over again. Helpful advice appreciated. Why wash it at all? Just paint right over it. No one will be the wiser. Joe Hell all this time i thought we were talking about exterior walls and pressure washers. WHY the hell would you "wash" an interior wall? -- Steve Barker remove the "not" from my address to email |
#20
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
For decades I've read that when washing walls, start at the bottom, and I've never understood it. Car wash instructions: Wash from bottom up, rinse from top down. That makes no sense. If you wash the bottom, then wash dirt on top of that, what good is it? Rinsing from the top makes sense, though, keeping dirt under the rinse line. Whatever. Steve |
#21
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
Steve Barker wrote: On 3/1/2011 12:52 AM, mm wrote: Wash walls from bottom up or top down?? For decades I've read that when washing walls, start at the bottom, and I've never understood it. Now I have to wash a wall, and I need someone to explain it to me, to convince me that that is the proper way. Seems to me if you start at the bottom and get it clean, there will be dirt running down the wall onto the clean part as soon as I get the part above it wet. And I'll have to clean the bottom parts over and over again. Helpful advice appreciated. Same as cars. Wash from the bottom up, rinse from the top down. you can't see where you've been washing if you get the whole thing wet by starting at the top. Totally different circumstances. Yes, on a car you wash from the bottom up because washing a car is generally a two step process of wash with soap followed by rinse. The reason to start at the bottom is simply to keep the areas already washed wet until the rinse is done. If you allow areas to dry in the process the rinse is not likely to remove the dried on soap and dirt. Washing a wall isn't normally a two step process. -- Steve Barker remove the "not" from my address to email |
#22
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
On 3/1/2011 1:06 PM, Steve Barker wrote:
On 3/1/2011 11:46 AM, Joe wrote: On Mar 1, 12:52 am, wrote: Wash walls from bottom up or top down?? For decades I've read that when washing walls, start at the bottom, and I've never understood it. Now I have to wash a wall, and I need someone to explain it to me, to convince me that that is the proper way. Seems to me if you start at the bottom and get it clean, there will be dirt running down the wall onto the clean part as soon as I get the part above it wet. And I'll have to clean the bottom parts over and over again. Helpful advice appreciated. Why wash it at all? Just paint right over it. No one will be the wiser. Joe Hell all this time i thought we were talking about exterior walls and pressure washers. WHY the hell would you "wash" an interior wall? Raised any kids lately? Ever tried repainting a heavily-used kitchen in any house, or any wall in a house with smokers, without doing a scrub-down first? Just sayin' -- aem sends... |
#23
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
On Tue, 01 Mar 2011 09:53:33 -0800, Smitty Two
wrote: In article , mm wrote: I got myself a new (to me) harvest gold stove, and I'm just cleaning where it will go. So does it match the fridge? I didn't see the last of that thread. The thread sort of fizzled out while I was waiting for the second guy to get back to me. Yes, it matches the fridge perfectly, even though it's a GE and the fridge is Whirlpool, and, of course, that means it matches the first stove too, It looks great, very clean, NO scratches. Clock works, oven works. She told me everything works, and she wasn't lying for the money. I got it Sunday and cooked a store-bought frozen pie last night Tuesday. The self-cleaning is dependent on the clock so it probably works. Most of the oven is spotless, even most of the oven gasket looks new with a little browning on 20 or 30%. He asked for $100 and when I give him 120, either because it is so nice or because I think he arranged to have a friend come home with him after church and they carried it up the stairs and to my friend's truck, he gave back the other 20**. It's about 1/2 inch shorter than mine, and mine was 30 inches but the top piece was about 29.5, so the fact that the counter was 1/2 inch wider than the dishwasher worked out. (It was still hard to get the old stove out or in. I had to tip it on its front legs because the control panel in back was the full 30 inches and couldn't slide by the counter.) Anyhow, to get this one in I took out the baseboard on the other side, so that allows the whole stove to move a half inch to the left. The seller had bought his house 4 years ago. This was his first email. "I have that stove and it's in ridiculously good condition. We moved it downstairs when we renovated the kitchen. The woman who owned the house before us was supposedly OCD, so she kept things really clean." They also had her refrigerator downstairs, a white one, and plan to replace this stove with another. The wife said her mother and her 2 aunts had two stoves and two fridges and so she does too, and oh, yeah, it is good when/if they have a party. But on the phone he had implied that he wasn't trying to sell the stove. I asked about that, and he said he was looking for fire wood and he searched on fire on Craig's list and found my ad that referred to my having a fire. Who knows how many of these stoves there are that people would sell for the right price but they don't know if anyone's looking. I had them right next to each other last night and took pictures, although the last time I tried to post pictures it went badly. The first guy answered me two days after the ad appeared and I wrote him right away. Then he didnt' get back to me at all until his wife did a week later. A day or two before I saw the stove, someone else replied, sending a picture and wanting me to make an offer. I wrote him three times and he never wrote back, but since the first couple took a week to write back, I waited more than a week for the second guy. I told him, If I'm willing to driv 30 minutes each way, you know I'm serious. I don't know why he didn't write back. But if he had, it would have made choosing harder. **(My friend with the truck is 74 and normally doing half of this would be nothing for him, but he's having arthroscopic surgery on his knee tomorrow and couldn't use that leg for much, and I had pushed for using the basement door because I'm out of shape and would run out of wind if we had gone up the stairs, but his toddler's toys were all over the place in front of the basement door, and the ground was still wet, so I guess he wanted to use the stairs and the front double doors, and I think he arranged to go to church with his friend and his little kids.) The Heat On indicator lights are smaller and dimmer than mine were. Had to turn off the light over the stove to be sure if they were on, but that's the sort of thing one faces with every new thing one buys. |
#24
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
Steve Barker wrote in
: On 3/1/2011 8:37 AM, Red Green wrote: wrote in : Wash walls from bottom up or top down?? For decades I've read that when washing walls, start at the bottom, and I've never understood it. Now I have to wash a wall, and I need someone to explain it to me, to convince me that that is the proper way. Seems to me if you start at the bottom and get it clean, there will be dirt running down the wall onto the clean part as soon as I get the part above it wet. And I'll have to clean the bottom parts over and over again. Helpful advice appreciated. Oh boy. Here we go. Outlet ground pin up or down... Down of course. Up looks stupid and doesn't fit 90 degree cords. Up looks stupid Finally! An answer that can't be refuted. |
#25
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
replying to mm, Jbad wrote:
My Mom said that if you start at the top, the drips will make streaks and the streaks will show when you finish washing the wall. I didn't believe her, washed a wall from the top and the streaks made me crazy. -- posted from http://www.homeownershub.com/mainten...wn-623688-.htm using HomeOwnersHub's Web, Mobile and Social Media Interface to alt.home.repair and other home improvement groups |
#26
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
On 3/1/2011 1:01 AM, David Nebenzahl wrote:
On 2/28/2011 10:52 PM mm spake thus: Wash walls from bottom up or top down?? For decades I've read that when washing walls, start at the bottom, and I've never understood it. Now I have to wash a wall, and I need someone to explain it to me, to convince me that that is the proper way. Seems to me if you start at the bottom and get it clean, there will be dirt running down the wall onto the clean part as soon as I get the part above it wet. And I'll have to clean the bottom parts over and over again. Helpful advice appreciated. I think you've got washing walls confused with shingling roofs. Shingling roof: start at the bottom and work your way up. Washing wall: start at the top. When you take a shower, where do you start, top or bottom? ^_^ TDD" Or wash a fire engine? |
#27
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
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#28
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
On Tue, 05 Apr 2016 16:44:01 +0000
Jbad wrote: replying to mm, Jbad wrote: My Mom said that if you start at the top, the drips will make streaks and the streaks will show when you finish washing the wall. I didn't believe her, washed a wall from the top and the streaks made me crazy. However the Mexican wants to do them is how they get done. |
#29
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
On Tue, 05 Apr 2016 16:44:01 +0000, Jbad
wrote: My Mom said that if you start at the top, the drips will make streaks and the streaks will show when you finish washing the wall. I didn't believe her, washed a wall from the top and the streaks made me crazy. So you wash from the bottom up and have dirt from the top streak down onto the already clean bottom wall. Are you a red bellied Brit or what? Get a refund. |
#31
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
On Tue, 5 Apr 2016 22:23:52 -0400, Stormin Mormon
wrote: On 4/5/2016 4:59 PM, Micky wrote: On Tue, 5 Apr 2016 09:58:52 -0700 (PDT), wrote: On 3/1/2011 1:01 AM, David Nebenzahl wrote: On 2/28/2011 10:52 PM mm spake thus: Wash walls from bottom up or top down?? For decades I've read that when washing walls, start at the bottom, and I've never understood it. Now I have to wash a wall, and I need someone to explain it to me, to convince me that that is the proper way. Seems to me if you start at the bottom and get it clean, there will be dirt running down the wall onto the clean part as soon as I get the part above it wet. And I'll have to clean the bottom parts over and over again. Helpful advice appreciated. I think you've got washing walls confused with shingling roofs. No, he's right that that's what they say. I've never understood it either. My solution has been to never wash my walls. Anyone complains, I have a good reason. I was told years ago, if you wash walls top down, the drips and dribbles go into dirt. The resulting some thing is far harder to clean, rather than having the dribbles go into clean wall. Not sure I believe it. Wash from the bottom up, rinse from the top down.. A single step cleaning doesn't work very well, from either top or bottom. |
#32
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
On 4/5/2016 6:42 PM, Oren wrote:
On Tue, 05 Apr 2016 16:44:01 +0000, Jbad wrote: My Mom said that if you start at the top, the drips will make streaks and the streaks will show when you finish washing the wall. I didn't believe her, washed a wall from the top and the streaks made me crazy. So you wash from the bottom up and have dirt from the top streak down onto the already clean bottom wall. Are you a red bellied Brit or what? Get a refund. When I was a kid in the 50s, we lived in a factory area. There was even a steel processing plant across the street. I was pretty dirty. You had to wash the walls at least once a year. You even had to wash the walls before you painted. Anyway, my mother used to always wash from the bottom up. She said if the did it the other way and you dribble down, the dirt makes streaks that are impossible to remove. When you wash from the bottom up and you dribble below, the dirty dribbles are easily wiped away with the cloth or sponge. I think you must wash, say a 4' or 5' wide swath and then go up and then repeat the next area. In reality I really don't know as I have always lived in a pretty clean area and never had to wash walls, except for kid marks. |
#33
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
On Tue, 5 Apr 2016 22:23:52 -0400, Stormin Mormon
wrote: On 4/5/2016 4:59 PM, Micky wrote: On Tue, 5 Apr 2016 09:58:52 -0700 (PDT), wrote: On 3/1/2011 1:01 AM, David Nebenzahl wrote: On 2/28/2011 10:52 PM mm spake thus: Wash walls from bottom up or top down?? For decades I've read that when washing walls, start at the bottom, and I've never understood it. Now I have to wash a wall, and I need someone to explain it to me, to convince me that that is the proper way. Seems to me if you start at the bottom and get it clean, there will be dirt running down the wall onto the clean part as soon as I get the part above it wet. And I'll have to clean the bottom parts over and over again. Helpful advice appreciated. I think you've got washing walls confused with shingling roofs. No, he's right that that's what they say. I've never understood it either. My solution has been to never wash my walls. Anyone complains, I have a good reason. I was told years ago, if you wash walls top down, the drips and dribbles go into dirt. The resulting some thing is far harder to So dirty dirt is harder to get off than less dirty dirt? This brings up the issue of laundry. What is "ground in dirt". I can see that if your crawling along the ground, putting weight on the dirty parts of your pants. But short of that, why is it harder to get really dirty clothes clean. Isn't most of the dirt resting on the first layer of dirt, so once that comes off, it should take all the dirt on top of it with it. clean, rather than having the dribbles go into clean wall. Not sure I believe it. |
#34
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
replying to aemeijers, Echo wrote:
"Ever tried repainting a heavily-used kitchen in any house, or any wall in a house with smokers, without doing a scrub-down first?" Actually, my painter did that. Prime with Kilz. It seals and covers smokers' walls just fine. As far as the top down/bottom up controversy, it never goes away. Here's a question that might make the answer obvious: How do you clean your kitchen appliances or cabinets? Top down, right? Does it make any difference that there are drips? No, because you get them as you go downward. I can't IMAGINE working from bottom up and constantly having to go back and clean up drips. It seems insane to me. All that extra work to re-clean a surface you just cleaned! -- posted from http://www.homeownershub.com/mainten...wn-623688-.htm |
#35
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
replying to clare, Bubba wrote:
This is the most logical explanation I've heard to date. -- for full context, visit http://www.homeownershub.com/mainten...wn-623688-.htm |
#36
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
replying to mm, Rusty wrote:
Basically it's like this. concrete wall or stucco wall is very porous. If you start at the bottom you're basically filling the pores with clean water. If you start at the top dirty water will run down and fill the pores below. When the wall dries what's in the pores is how the wall will look. Starting from the Bottom clean. starting from the top streaks. -- for full context, visit https://www.homeownershub.com/mainte...wn-623688-.htm |
#37
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
replying to thekmanrocks, MW wrote:
BOTTOM UP! If using extremely dry ! damp sponge or whatever rag blah thoroughly wrung out! then a trace of your cleaning agent/solution say for example:::::: cleaning wall off with tsp, its BOTTOM UP! to avoid streaking from your hand / applicator motions. IF excessively wet TOP DOWN naturally HA! -- for full context, visit https://www.homeownershub.com/mainte...wn-623688-.htm |
#38
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
replying to Micky, Silly gillie wrote:
Thats what my mother taught me. When I questioned her, she said it was to avoid streaking stains left by clean wall water running down on to the dirty wall and leaving streaks that wont come out. -- for full context, visit https://www.homeownershub.com/mainte...wn-623688-.htm |
#39
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
replying to Stormin Mormon, Silly gillie wrote:
Thats what my mother taught me. -- for full context, visit https://www.homeownershub.com/mainte...wn-623688-.htm |
#40
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Wash walls from bottom up or top down??
In alt.home.repair, on Sat, 30 Mar 2019 22:44:02 GMT, Silly gillie
m wrote: replying to Micky, Silly gillie wrote: That’s what my mother taught me. What is what your mother taught you? When I questioned her, she said it was to What is "it"? avoid streaking stains left by clean wall water running down on to the dirty wall and leaving streaks that won’t come out. |
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