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#1
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My kitchen and bathroom counters are covered with beautiful 4" ceramic tiles
and 1/2 " grout lines. They have lasted for 30 years without a chip or blemish. The problem is with the grout. Originally it was probably sealed. Over many years, the sealer has deteriorated. It is kind of scaling off and does not look so good any more. So, I would like to remove all remnants of the original sealer, then scrub the grout free of accumulated grime and then apply a new sealer. I can remove the old sealer pretty well with a brass bush, which does not scratch the tiles. However, it is hard work and I am tired of it. Is there a mechanical scrubber that will take the hard work out of refurbishing my grout? What do the pros use? I am sure they do not do it with a small brass toothbrush. Thanks -- www.rationality.net |
#2
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On Wed, 12 Sep 2012 15:11:17 -0700, "walter"
wrote: My kitchen and bathroom counters are covered with beautiful 4" ceramic tiles and 1/2 " grout lines. They have lasted for 30 years without a chip or blemish. The problem is with the grout. Originally it was probably sealed. Over many years, the sealer has deteriorated. It is kind of scaling off and does not look so good any more. So, I would like to remove all remnants of the original sealer, then scrub the grout free of accumulated grime and then apply a new sealer. I can remove the old sealer pretty well with a brass bush, which does not scratch the tiles. However, it is hard work and I am tired of it. Is there a mechanical scrubber that will take the hard work out of refurbishing my grout? What do the pros use? I am sure they do not do it with a small brass toothbrush. Thanks Consider a grout saw from the borg stores (~$5.00). The blade has diamond grit edges and will remove grout. If you have stains like grease take it down a little move and add clean grout on top of the old. Then seal again. Pic: http://www.prosourcecenter.com/catalog/10090GroutSaw.jpg |
#3
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"walter" wrote:
My kitchen and bathroom counters are covered with beautiful 4" ceramic tiles and 1/2 " grout lines. They have lasted for 30 years without a chip or blemish. The problem is with the grout. Originally it was probably sealed. Over many years, the sealer has deteriorated. It is kind of scaling off and does not look so good any more. So, I would like to remove all remnants of the original sealer, then scrub the grout free of accumulated grime and then apply a new sealer. I can remove the old sealer pretty well with a brass bush, which does not scratch the tiles. However, it is hard work and I am tired of it. Is there a mechanical scrubber that will take the hard work out of refurbishing my grout? What do the pros use? I am sure they do not do it with a small brass toothbrush. Thanks Get a Harbor Freight Multi-Function tool (you *know* you want one!) and then get one of this: http://www.harborfreight.com/diamond...ade-67264.html They also make a grout blade for the Dremel Multi-Max and Fein version. |
#4
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On Wed, 12 Sep 2012 15:50:09 -0700, Oren wrote:
On Wed, 12 Sep 2012 15:11:17 -0700, "walter" wrote: My kitchen and bathroom counters are covered with beautiful 4" ceramic tiles and 1/2 " grout lines. They have lasted for 30 years without a chip or blemish. The problem is with the grout. Originally it was probably sealed. Over many years, the sealer has deteriorated. It is kind of scaling off and does not look so good any more. So, I would like to remove all remnants of the original sealer, then scrub the grout free of accumulated grime and then apply a new sealer. I can remove the old sealer pretty well with a brass bush, which does not scratch the tiles. However, it is hard work and I am tired of it. Is there a mechanical scrubber that will take the hard work out of refurbishing my grout? What do the pros use? I am sure they do not do it with a small brass toothbrush. Thanks Consider a grout saw from the borg stores (~$5.00). The blade has diamond grit edges and will remove grout. If you have stains like grease take it down a little move and add clean grout on top of the old. Then seal again. Pic: http://www.prosourcecenter.com/catalog/10090GroutSaw.jpg Are you sure about this .... "add clean grout on top of the old" ? It just doesn't sound right to me. And I would think it would just be easier to remove all the old grout but this isn't a fun job either. |
#5
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On Wed, 12 Sep 2012 20:40:20 -0500, "Doug"
wrote: On Wed, 12 Sep 2012 15:50:09 -0700, Oren wrote: On Wed, 12 Sep 2012 15:11:17 -0700, "walter" wrote: My kitchen and bathroom counters are covered with beautiful 4" ceramic tiles and 1/2 " grout lines. They have lasted for 30 years without a chip or blemish. The problem is with the grout. Originally it was probably sealed. Over many years, the sealer has deteriorated. It is kind of scaling off and does not look so good any more. So, I would like to remove all remnants of the original sealer, then scrub the grout free of accumulated grime and then apply a new sealer. I can remove the old sealer pretty well with a brass bush, which does not scratch the tiles. However, it is hard work and I am tired of it. Is there a mechanical scrubber that will take the hard work out of refurbishing my grout? What do the pros use? I am sure they do not do it with a small brass toothbrush. Thanks Consider a grout saw from the borg stores (~$5.00). The blade has diamond grit edges and will remove grout. If you have stains like grease take it down a little move and add clean grout on top of the old. Then seal again. Pic: http://www.prosourcecenter.com/catalog/10090GroutSaw.jpg Are you sure about this .... "add clean grout on top of the old" ? It just doesn't sound right to me. And I would think it would just be easier to remove all the old grout but this isn't a fun job either. Yes I'm sure (experience). Why remove all the grout? Get past a grease stain or faulty grout. Fix 'er up works. Cleaned and sealed, I've had 4 homes with 4" tile on a counter top. Ask my bride! She knows how to make dirty tile look great. We sold every one with a bright and shiny counter top of tile. |
#6
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On Sep 12, 5:11*pm, "walter" wrote:
My kitchen and bathroom counters are covered with beautiful 4" ceramic tiles and 1/2 " grout lines. They have lasted for 30 years without a chip or blemish. The problem is with the grout. Originally it was probably sealed. Over many years, the sealer has deteriorated. It is kind of scaling off and does not look so good any more. So, I would like to remove all remnants of the original sealer, then scrub the grout free of accumulated grime and then apply a new sealer. I can remove the old sealer pretty well with a brass bush, which does not scratch the tiles. However, it is hard work and I am tired of it. Is there a mechanical scrubber that will take the hard work out of refurbishing my grout? What do the pros use? I am sure they do not do it with a small brass toothbrush. Thanks --www.rationality.net 1/2" grout lines? |
#7
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#8
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Walter: This is gonna be a long post cuz removing grout sealer is something I've done a fair bit of.
You asked: "What do the pros use?" No one makes a living doing what you're trying to do. So there are no "pros" at this. The closest thing would be a janitor... ...or a landlord. Seriously, I wouldn't start removing any grout with a power tool just to remove the sealer on it. If your sealer is peeling off the grout, then what you have on your counter tops is a "film forming" grout sealer (as opposed to a "penetrating" grout sealer). ((Penetrating grout sealers weren't very common 30 years ago.)) Now, film forming grout sealers come in two flavours; acrylic and silicone based. That is, the plastic they're made of will either be the same plastic that Plexiglas is made of, or the same plastic that silicone caulk is made of (which is technically called "siloxane" nowadays). So, since top quality latex paints are also "acrylic", if your grout sealer is acrylic, then anything that removes latex paint will also remove your grout sealer. Take some nail polish remover, or buy some acetone at any paint & hardware store or home center, and apply it to your grout line(s) and scrub with a green Scotchbrite pad ![]() which you can buy in any super market for scrubbing pots and pans. I'm suggesting you use a Scotchbrite pad instead of a tooth brush or denture cleaning brush because Scotchbrite pads won't spray tiny droplets of acetone all over the place like a stiff bristle brush will. Be careful using acetone. It's highly flammable and it'll dissolve a lot of different stuff, so don't spill any on your floor. Maybe pour some acetone into a large mouth container outside or over your kitchen sink, and then dip a piece of Scotchbrite pad in it and scrub your grout lines with that. Use a resealable container cuz acetone evaporates fairly quickly so you can't leave that container open overnight or even open for a few hours. If the sealer is removed, then you can continue using acetone, or lacquer thinner (which evaporates more slowly) or xylene (which evaporates even slower) instead, or switch to a methylene chloride based paint stripper like Polystrippa. All of the previously mentioned solvents evaporate completely without leaving a residue. The active ingredient in conventional paint strippers is methylene chloride which also evaporates completely without leaving any residue. If you find any residue left by a paint stripper, it'll just be the gelling agent, which you can remove with mineral spirits (which also evaporates without leaving any residue). If the sealer doesn't come off, then I'd assume it's a silicone based grout sealer, and use this stuff on it: ![]() or... http://external.ak.fbcdn.net/safe_im...fL._SL500_.jpg both DAP's Silicone-Be-Gone and McKanica's Silicone Caulk Remover Gel are basically gelled mineral spirits, and you should be able to find both of them in the caulking aisle of your local hardware store or home center. Now, I've never used a silicone based film forming grout sealer (and I don't intend to start), so I have no experience removing silicone based grout sealers. We'll have to play this by ear in that respect. However, I have acrylic film forming grout sealers in all 21 of my apartment bathrooms, and I've had plenty of experience removing acrylic grout sealers from the ceramic tiling on the walls around the bathtubs in those apartments. You might not believe it, but if you have the world's worst chain smoker as a tenant, the acrylic grout sealer on your bathroom ceramic tiling can get smoke stained just like the acrylic paint on the walls of that apartment. So, do the acetone test and/or the Silicone-Be-Gone tests and post again. Once we know what kind of grout sealer you have, we can talk about the easiest way to remove it. And, we can talk about the two best acrylic grout sealers (in my view) to put on. Last edited by nestork : September 13th 12 at 06:32 AM |
#9
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![]() wrote in message ... On Sep 12, 5:11 pm, "walter" wrote: My kitchen and bathroom counters are covered with beautiful 4" ceramic tiles and 1/2 " grout lines. They have lasted for 30 years without a chip or blemish. The problem is with the grout. Originally it was probably sealed. Over many years, the sealer has deteriorated. It is kind of scaling off and does not look so good any more. So, I would like to remove all remnants of the original sealer, then scrub the grout free of accumulated grime and then apply a new sealer. I can remove the old sealer pretty well with a brass bush, which does not scratch the tiles. However, it is hard work and I am tired of it. Is there a mechanical scrubber that will take the hard work out of refurbishing my grout? What do the pros use? I am sure they do not do it with a small brass toothbrush. Thanks --www.rationality.net 1/2" grout lines? You are right; I meant 1/4" grout lines |
#10
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clipped
http://www.prosourcecenter.com/catalog/10090GroutSaw.jpg Are you sure about this .... "add clean grout on top of the old" ? It just doesn't sound right to me. And I would think it would just be easier to remove all the old grout but this isn't a fun job either. I don't know of an easy option. Removing some of the old grout....I think removing 1/8" depth is minimum to give new grout a secure bed...is the only way to renew it. Unless you try sandpaper and then resealing. I removed and replaced grout in a tile shower stall that had 1x4 tiles and fine grout lines. Hard work with a Dremel grout tool, but doable (and I'm an old lady). Most difficult were getting down to do the lowest portions and then putting in new grout; it takes some muscle to mush in the new grout. |
#11
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walter wrote:
My kitchen and bathroom counters are covered with beautiful 4" ceramic tiles and 1/2 " grout lines. They have lasted for 30 years without a chip or blemish. The problem is with the grout. Originally it was probably sealed. Over many years, the sealer has deteriorated. It is kind of scaling off and does not look so good any more. So, I would like to remove all remnants of the original sealer, then scrub the grout free of accumulated grime and then apply a new sealer. I can remove the old sealer pretty well with a brass bush, which does not scratch the tiles. However, it is hard work and I am tired of it. Is there a mechanical scrubber that will take the hard work out of refurbishing my grout? What do the pros use? I am sure they do not do it with a small brass toothbrush. If it were me, I'd use acid. One *does* need to know how to use it though, -- dadiOH ____________________________ Winters getting colder? Tired of the rat race? Maybe just ready for a change? Check it out... http://www.floridaloghouse.net |
#12
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On Wed, 12 Sep 2012 19:00:55 -0700, Oren wrote:
On Wed, 12 Sep 2012 20:40:20 -0500, "Doug" wrote: On Wed, 12 Sep 2012 15:50:09 -0700, Oren wrote: On Wed, 12 Sep 2012 15:11:17 -0700, "walter" wrote: My kitchen and bathroom counters are covered with beautiful 4" ceramic tiles and 1/2 " grout lines. They have lasted for 30 years without a chip or blemish. The problem is with the grout. Originally it was probably sealed. Over many years, the sealer has deteriorated. It is kind of scaling off and does not look so good any more. So, I would like to remove all remnants of the original sealer, then scrub the grout free of accumulated grime and then apply a new sealer. I can remove the old sealer pretty well with a brass bush, which does not scratch the tiles. However, it is hard work and I am tired of it. Is there a mechanical scrubber that will take the hard work out of refurbishing my grout? What do the pros use? I am sure they do not do it with a small brass toothbrush. Thanks Consider a grout saw from the borg stores (~$5.00). The blade has diamond grit edges and will remove grout. If you have stains like grease take it down a little move and add clean grout on top of the old. Then seal again. Pic: http://www.prosourcecenter.com/catalog/10090GroutSaw.jpg Are you sure about this .... "add clean grout on top of the old" ? It just doesn't sound right to me. And I would think it would just be easier to remove all the old grout but this isn't a fun job either. Yes I'm sure (experience). Why remove all the grout? Get past a grease stain or faulty grout. Fix 'er up works. Cleaned and sealed, I've had 4 homes with 4" tile on a counter top. Ask my bride! She knows how to make dirty tile look great. We sold every one with a bright and shiny counter top of tile. I guess I'm wondering how well the new and old bond after a year or so of wear? I'm no expert on this subject but I'm just leary on this idea. I do think tho the old has to at least be cleaned and brushed well to make a decent bond at a minimum. Maybe they sell a bonding agent before you put down the new grout to help in this cause??? I'm not going to argue with experience tho. |
#13
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On Sep 13, 8:40*am, "Doug" wrote:
On Wed, 12 Sep 2012 19:00:55 -0700, Oren wrote: On Wed, 12 Sep 2012 20:40:20 -0500, "Doug" wrote: On Wed, 12 Sep 2012 15:50:09 -0700, Oren wrote: On Wed, 12 Sep 2012 15:11:17 -0700, "walter" wrote: My kitchen and bathroom counters are covered with beautiful 4" ceramic tiles and 1/2 " grout lines. They have lasted for 30 years without a chip or blemish. The problem is with the grout. Originally it was probably sealed. Over many years, the sealer has deteriorated. It is kind of scaling off and does not look so good any more. So, I would like to remove all remnants of the original sealer, then scrub the grout free of accumulated grime and then apply a new sealer. I can remove the old sealer pretty well with a brass bush, which does not scratch the tiles. However, it is hard work and I am tired of it. Is there a mechanical scrubber that will take the hard work out of refurbishing my grout? What do the pros use? I am sure they do not do it with a small brass toothbrush. Thanks Consider a grout saw from the borg stores (~$5.00). The blade has diamond grit edges and will remove grout. If you have stains like grease take it down a little move and add clean grout on top of the old. Then seal again. Pic: http://www.prosourcecenter.com/catalog/10090GroutSaw.jpg Are you sure about this .... "add clean grout on top of the old" ? It just doesn't sound right to me. * And I would think it would just be easier to remove all the old grout but this isn't a fun job either. Yes I'm sure (experience). Why remove all the grout? Get past a grease stain or faulty grout. Fix 'er up works. Cleaned and sealed, I've had 4 homes with 4" tile on a counter top. Ask my bride! She knows how to make dirty tile look great. We sold every one with a bright and shiny counter top of tile. I guess I'm wondering how well the new and old bond after a year or so of wear? * I'm no expert on this subject but I'm just leary on this idea. * I do think tho the old has to at least be cleaned and brushed well to make a decent bond at a minimum. * Maybe they sell a bonding agent before you put down the new grout to help in this cause??? *I'm not going to argue with experience tho. * *- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - "I do think tho the old has to at least be cleaned and brushed well to make a decent bond at a minimum" Go back to the original suggestion that you asked about. The first step was to use a grout saw to remove some of the old grout. This, of course, would be done anywhere you would be adding new grout over old. "remove some of the old grout" "cleaned and brushed well" If you didn't remove some of the old grout, bonding would not the only issue, physical space would also be a problem. |
#14
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On Thu, 13 Sep 2012 06:20:26 -0700 (PDT), DerbyDad03
wrote: On Sep 13, 8:40*am, "Doug" wrote: On Wed, 12 Sep 2012 19:00:55 -0700, Oren wrote: On Wed, 12 Sep 2012 20:40:20 -0500, "Doug" wrote: On Wed, 12 Sep 2012 15:50:09 -0700, Oren wrote: On Wed, 12 Sep 2012 15:11:17 -0700, "walter" wrote: My kitchen and bathroom counters are covered with beautiful 4" ceramic tiles and 1/2 " grout lines. They have lasted for 30 years without a chip or blemish. The problem is with the grout. Originally it was probably sealed. Over many years, the sealer has deteriorated. It is kind of scaling off and does not look so good any more. So, I would like to remove all remnants of the original sealer, then scrub the grout free of accumulated grime and then apply a new sealer. I can remove the old sealer pretty well with a brass bush, which does not scratch the tiles. However, it is hard work and I am tired of it. Is there a mechanical scrubber that will take the hard work out of refurbishing my grout? What do the pros use? I am sure they do not do it with a small brass toothbrush. Thanks Consider a grout saw from the borg stores (~$5.00). The blade has diamond grit edges and will remove grout. If you have stains like grease take it down a little move and add clean grout on top of the old. Then seal again. Pic: http://www.prosourcecenter.com/catalog/10090GroutSaw.jpg Are you sure about this .... "add clean grout on top of the old" ? It just doesn't sound right to me. * And I would think it would just be easier to remove all the old grout but this isn't a fun job either. Yes I'm sure (experience). Why remove all the grout? Get past a grease stain or faulty grout. Fix 'er up works. Cleaned and sealed, I've had 4 homes with 4" tile on a counter top. Ask my bride! She knows how to make dirty tile look great. We sold every one with a bright and shiny counter top of tile. I guess I'm wondering how well the new and old bond after a year or so of wear? * I'm no expert on this subject but I'm just leary on this idea. * I do think tho the old has to at least be cleaned and brushed well to make a decent bond at a minimum. * Maybe they sell a bonding agent before you put down the new grout to help in this cause??? *I'm not going to argue with experience tho. * *- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - "I do think tho the old has to at least be cleaned and brushed well to make a decent bond at a minimum" Go back to the original suggestion that you asked about. The first step was to use a grout saw to remove some of the old grout. This, of course, would be done anywhere you would be adding new grout over old. "remove some of the old grout" "cleaned and brushed well" If you didn't remove some of the old grout, bonding would not the only issue, physical space would also be a problem. okay |
#15
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On 9/13/2012 7:57 AM, dadiOH wrote:
walter wrote: My kitchen and bathroom counters are covered with beautiful 4" ceramic tiles and 1/2 " grout lines. They have lasted for 30 years without a chip or blemish. The problem is with the grout. Originally it was probably sealed. Over many years, the sealer has deteriorated. It is kind of scaling off and does not look so good any more. So, I would like to remove all remnants of the original sealer, then scrub the grout free of accumulated grime and then apply a new sealer. I can remove the old sealer pretty well with a brass bush, which does not scratch the tiles. However, it is hard work and I am tired of it. Is there a mechanical scrubber that will take the hard work out of refurbishing my grout? What do the pros use? I am sure they do not do it with a small brass toothbrush. If it were me, I'd use acid. One *does* need to know how to use it though, Ever do it? Acid will damage tile if the tile has metallic (coloring) glaze. |
#16
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On Thu, 13 Sep 2012 07:12:12 -0400, Norminn wrote:
clipped http://www.prosourcecenter.com/catalog/10090GroutSaw.jpg Are you sure about this .... "add clean grout on top of the old" ? It just doesn't sound right to me. And I would think it would just be easier to remove all the old grout but this isn't a fun job either. I don't know of an easy option. Removing some of the old grout....I think removing 1/8" depth is minimum to give new grout a secure bed...is the only way to renew it. Unless you try sandpaper and then resealing. I removed and replaced grout in a tile shower stall that had 1x4 tiles and fine grout lines. Hard work with a Dremel grout tool, but doable (and I'm an old lady). Most difficult were getting down to do the lowest portions and then putting in new grout; it takes some muscle to mush in the new grout. I also replaced the grout in a shower surround using a Dremel tool to cut the old tile out. I found a source on the Internet for the bits; would have gone broke with Dremel bits, at $10 each. I think I went through 20 bits. If I had to do it again, I'd use the grout saw for a multi-tool. The rotary motion of the Dremel tended to pull the bit into the tile. |
#17
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On Wed, 12 Sep 2012 22:24:02 -0700, "walter" wrote:
wrote in message ... On Sep 12, 5:11 pm, "walter" wrote: My kitchen and bathroom counters are covered with beautiful 4" ceramic tiles and 1/2 " grout lines. They have lasted for 30 years without a chip or blemish. The problem is with the grout. Originally it was probably sealed. Over many years, the sealer has deteriorated. It is kind of scaling off and does not look so good any more. So, I would like to remove all remnants of the original sealer, then scrub the grout free of accumulated grime and then apply a new sealer. I can remove the old sealer pretty well with a brass bush, which does not scratch the tiles. However, it is hard work and I am tired of it. Is there a mechanical scrubber that will take the hard work out of refurbishing my grout? What do the pros use? I am sure they do not do it with a small brass toothbrush. Thanks --www.rationality.net 1/2" grout lines? You are right; I meant 1/4" grout lines That's still pretty wide. The grout should come out pretty easily (compared to 1/8", or less). With lines that wide, I'd really look into the grout saw options for multi-tools. |
#18
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On Sep 13, 10:51*am, "
wrote: On Wed, 12 Sep 2012 22:24:02 -0700, "walter" wrote: wrote in message .... On Sep 12, 5:11 pm, "walter" wrote: My kitchen and bathroom counters are covered with beautiful 4" ceramic tiles and 1/2 " grout lines. They have lasted for 30 years without a chip or blemish. The problem is with the grout. Originally it was probably sealed. Over many years, the sealer has deteriorated. It is kind of scaling off and does not look so good any more. So, I would like to remove all remnants of the original sealer, then scrub the grout free of accumulated grime and then apply a new sealer. I can remove the old sealer pretty well with a brass bush, which does not scratch the tiles. However, it is hard work and I am tired of it. Is there a mechanical scrubber that will take the hard work out of refurbishing my grout? What do the pros use? I am sure they do not do it with a small brass toothbrush. Thanks --www.rationality.net 1/2" grout lines? You are right; I meant 1/4" grout lines That's still pretty wide. *The grout should come out pretty easily (compared to 1/8", or less). * With lines that wide, I'd really look into the grout saw options for multi-tools.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - If I were to use a multi-tool, I would use this as the excuse to buy the variable speed model from HF. Even though I've only used the single speed model, there have been times when I've said to myself "Man, I wish I could slow this thing down". I don't know if it would have helped/worked, but I would have like to have had the opportunity to try. Before I attacked any project related to tile that I wanted to save, I'd really want to start as slow as possible to reduce the chance of a runaway tool. I know the HF variable speed model can be had for ~$40 when it's on sale, but I just haven't been able to justify it when the single speed is still working fine. I really need to drop that thing off a roof or something. I'm going to be taking it to my dad's house this weekend, which is 300 miles away. Maybe I'll forget to bring it home. It sure wouldn't be worth the shipping costs to get it back. ;-) |
#19
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On Thu, 13 Sep 2012 07:40:40 -0500, "Doug"
wrote: On Wed, 12 Sep 2012 19:00:55 -0700, Oren wrote: On Wed, 12 Sep 2012 20:40:20 -0500, "Doug" wrote: On Wed, 12 Sep 2012 15:50:09 -0700, Oren wrote: On Wed, 12 Sep 2012 15:11:17 -0700, "walter" wrote: My kitchen and bathroom counters are covered with beautiful 4" ceramic tiles and 1/2 " grout lines. They have lasted for 30 years without a chip or blemish. The problem is with the grout. Originally it was probably sealed. Over many years, the sealer has deteriorated. It is kind of scaling off and does not look so good any more. So, I would like to remove all remnants of the original sealer, then scrub the grout free of accumulated grime and then apply a new sealer. I can remove the old sealer pretty well with a brass bush, which does not scratch the tiles. However, it is hard work and I am tired of it. Is there a mechanical scrubber that will take the hard work out of refurbishing my grout? What do the pros use? I am sure they do not do it with a small brass toothbrush. Thanks Consider a grout saw from the borg stores (~$5.00). The blade has diamond grit edges and will remove grout. If you have stains like grease take it down a little move and add clean grout on top of the old. Then seal again. Pic: http://www.prosourcecenter.com/catalog/10090GroutSaw.jpg Are you sure about this .... "add clean grout on top of the old" ? It just doesn't sound right to me. And I would think it would just be easier to remove all the old grout but this isn't a fun job either. Yes I'm sure (experience). Why remove all the grout? Get past a grease stain or faulty grout. Fix 'er up works. Cleaned and sealed, I've had 4 homes with 4" tile on a counter top. Ask my bride! She knows how to make dirty tile look great. We sold every one with a bright and shiny counter top of tile. I guess I'm wondering how well the new and old bond after a year or so of wear? I'm no expert on this subject but I'm just leary on this idea. I do think tho the old has to at least be cleaned and brushed well to make a decent bond at a minimum. Maybe they sell a bonding agent before you put down the new grout to help in this cause??? I'm not going to argue with experience tho. I've not checked for a "bonding agent" but I suppose there is one? With the grout saw; removal of sealer, stains and some grout, adding fresh grout on top will bond. For example I replaced a single cracked floor tile. Once grouted, the grout stuck to the old grout at the corners. It never showed any failure. |
#20
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On Thu, 13 Sep 2012 08:13:50 -0700 (PDT), DerbyDad03
wrote: On Sep 13, 10:51*am, " wrote: On Wed, 12 Sep 2012 22:24:02 -0700, "walter" wrote: wrote in message ... On Sep 12, 5:11 pm, "walter" wrote: My kitchen and bathroom counters are covered with beautiful 4" ceramic tiles and 1/2 " grout lines. They have lasted for 30 years without a chip or blemish. The problem is with the grout. Originally it was probably sealed. Over many years, the sealer has deteriorated. It is kind of scaling off and does not look so good any more. So, I would like to remove all remnants of the original sealer, then scrub the grout free of accumulated grime and then apply a new sealer. I can remove the old sealer pretty well with a brass bush, which does not scratch the tiles. However, it is hard work and I am tired of it. Is there a mechanical scrubber that will take the hard work out of refurbishing my grout? What do the pros use? I am sure they do not do it with a small brass toothbrush. Thanks --www.rationality.net 1/2" grout lines? You are right; I meant 1/4" grout lines That's still pretty wide. *The grout should come out pretty easily (compared to 1/8", or less). * With lines that wide, I'd really look into the grout saw options for multi-tools.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - If I were to use a multi-tool, I would use this as the excuse to buy the variable speed model from HF. I have a Dremel and a cordless Bosch. Variable speed is good but I rarely use the feature. In this case it might be good to minimize heat, extending blade life. Even though I've only used the single speed model, there have been times when I've said to myself "Man, I wish I could slow this thing down". I don't know if it would have helped/worked, but I would have like to have had the opportunity to try. Before I attacked any project related to tile that I wanted to save, I'd really want to start as slow as possible to reduce the chance of a runaway tool. That's sometimes a good plan. However, I've noticed that sometimes a multi-tool will be less controllable at low speed. Like a Sawsall, sometimes it'll want to "bind". A higher speed makes that less likely (but potentially worse when it does). IT's a trade-off but variable is good. I know the HF variable speed model can be had for ~$40 when it's on sale, but I just haven't been able to justify it when the single speed is still working fine. I really need to drop that thing off a roof or something. I'm going to be taking it to my dad's house this weekend, which is 300 miles away. Maybe I'll forget to bring it home. It sure wouldn't be worth the shipping costs to get it back. ;-) That's why I don't buy cheep tools. They're too hard to replace. ;-) |
#21
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On Thu, 13 Sep 2012 09:15:11 -0700, Oren wrote:
On Thu, 13 Sep 2012 07:40:40 -0500, "Doug" wrote: On Wed, 12 Sep 2012 19:00:55 -0700, Oren wrote: On Wed, 12 Sep 2012 20:40:20 -0500, "Doug" wrote: On Wed, 12 Sep 2012 15:50:09 -0700, Oren wrote: On Wed, 12 Sep 2012 15:11:17 -0700, "walter" wrote: My kitchen and bathroom counters are covered with beautiful 4" ceramic tiles and 1/2 " grout lines. They have lasted for 30 years without a chip or blemish. The problem is with the grout. Originally it was probably sealed. Over many years, the sealer has deteriorated. It is kind of scaling off and does not look so good any more. So, I would like to remove all remnants of the original sealer, then scrub the grout free of accumulated grime and then apply a new sealer. I can remove the old sealer pretty well with a brass bush, which does not scratch the tiles. However, it is hard work and I am tired of it. Is there a mechanical scrubber that will take the hard work out of refurbishing my grout? What do the pros use? I am sure they do not do it with a small brass toothbrush. Thanks Consider a grout saw from the borg stores (~$5.00). The blade has diamond grit edges and will remove grout. If you have stains like grease take it down a little move and add clean grout on top of the old. Then seal again. Pic: http://www.prosourcecenter.com/catalog/10090GroutSaw.jpg Are you sure about this .... "add clean grout on top of the old" ? It just doesn't sound right to me. And I would think it would just be easier to remove all the old grout but this isn't a fun job either. Yes I'm sure (experience). Why remove all the grout? Get past a grease stain or faulty grout. Fix 'er up works. Cleaned and sealed, I've had 4 homes with 4" tile on a counter top. Ask my bride! She knows how to make dirty tile look great. We sold every one with a bright and shiny counter top of tile. I guess I'm wondering how well the new and old bond after a year or so of wear? I'm no expert on this subject but I'm just leary on this idea. I do think tho the old has to at least be cleaned and brushed well to make a decent bond at a minimum. Maybe they sell a bonding agent before you put down the new grout to help in this cause??? I'm not going to argue with experience tho. I've not checked for a "bonding agent" but I suppose there is one? With the grout saw; removal of sealer, stains and some grout, adding fresh grout on top will bond. For example I replaced a single cracked floor tile. Once grouted, the grout stuck to the old grout at the corners. It never showed any failure. Okay, sounds good to me. I'll just try to remember this tho I hope I won't have to....if you know what I mean. |
#22
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On Thu, 13 Sep 2012 19:32:18 +0000, nestork
wrote: Removing the grout to remove the sealer on the grout is completely unnecessary. It just creates more work removing enough grout so that the new grout sticks into the grout joints properly, and in my humble opinion, to accomplish that, you'd either need to use concrete bonding agent on the old grout or remove the old grout entirely and regrout from scratch. Either way, it's simply no necessary. It's like removing the floor to remove the carpet on the floor. Or, removing the paint to remove the dirt on the paint. If the sealer is already coming off the grout on it's own, it's not gonna be necessary to remove the grout to remove what doesn't come off on it's own. OK, I'm gonna get off my soap box now, but removing the grout to remove the sealer on that grout is completely unnecessary. I'll give your report to my bride for her consideration. |
#23
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Walter wrote:
Quote:
None of those things are going to harm either the grout or the tiles, and if they don't work, the option of taking a saw to the counter tops remains open as a back-up plan: Walter: If you're still reading this post, can you read and respond to my post on the first page of this thread? Thank you. |
#24
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Doug wrote:
Okay, sounds good to me. I'll just try to remember this tho I hope I won't have to....if you know what I mean. You could also look at "grout colorants". |
#25
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Norminn wrote:
On 9/13/2012 7:57 AM, dadiOH wrote: walter wrote: My kitchen and bathroom counters are covered with beautiful 4" ceramic tiles and 1/2 " grout lines. They have lasted for 30 years without a chip or blemish. The problem is with the grout. Originally it was probably sealed. Over many years, the sealer has deteriorated. It is kind of scaling off and does not look so good any more. So, I would like to remove all remnants of the original sealer, then scrub the grout free of accumulated grime and then apply a new sealer. I can remove the old sealer pretty well with a brass bush, which does not scratch the tiles. However, it is hard work and I am tired of it. Is there a mechanical scrubber that will take the hard work out of refurbishing my grout? What do the pros use? I am sure they do not do it with a small brass toothbrush. If it were me, I'd use acid. One *does* need to know how to use it though, Ever do it? Acid will damage tile if the tile has metallic (coloring) glaze. Yeah, I've done it. First time some 50+ years ago was sort of an error...rented apartment, really dirty white grout on the shower floor tile. My intention was to remove part and redo; acid was too strong, ate it all out. No big problem, just needed more grout than I had planned for. And no, I wouldn't use it on anything that the acid could damage other than the grout. -- dadiOH ____________________________ Winters getting colder? Tired of the rat race? Maybe just ready for a change? Check it out... http://www.floridaloghouse.net |
#26
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walter wrote:
My kitchen and bathroom counters are covered with beautiful 4" ceramic tiles and 1/2 " grout lines. They have lasted for 30 years without a chip or blemish. The problem is with the grout. Originally it was probably sealed. Over many years, the sealer has deteriorated. It is kind of scaling off and does not look so good any more. So, I would like to remove all remnants of the original sealer, then scrub the grout free of accumulated grime and then apply a new sealer. I can remove the old sealer pretty well with a brass bush, which does not scratch the tiles. However, it is hard work and I am tired of it. Is there a mechanical scrubber that will take the hard work out of refurbishing my grout? What do the pros use? I am sure they do not do it with a small brass toothbrush. Another possibility is to use what I call a reefing iron. My experience with them has been to remove material from the seams in boats. There is something made for masonry seams that is essentially the same but I don't know the name...maybe "seam chisel" or "joint chisel". This is what they look like, "D" in photo near bottom... http://www.sydnassloot.com/caulking.htm The blade is tapered both vertically and horizontally. To use, one taps the tip into and along the seam, lifting up to break up and expel material. I've never tried one on masonry or grout but if I had a sizeable area of grout to remove I'd certainly give one a whirl. I'm sure it would work far better than these over priced Dremel cutting wheels. If joint width permits, I might use a circular saw with a masonry cut off wheel. Gotta stay away from the tile edges though. -- dadiOH ____________________________ Winters getting colder? Tired of the rat race? Maybe just ready for a change? Check it out... http://www.floridaloghouse.net |
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