hudsoncustom
Member
Greetings fellas.
I'm hoping for some guidance with a situation I've got to get resolved.
Recently, we had some really nasty wind and rain here in WA, and we had water leak into our family room through a crack in a foundation wall. I did not know we had a crack previously, but the crack has since been repaired and is no longer leaking.
The water saturated the carpet on the floor, so I removed the carpet. Under the carpet were 9x9 VCT tiles. They have all been removed as well.
The adhesive residue used to install the tiles is giving me problems. This stuff is black, smells like tar/asphalt, and is very hard. I did a little "crack internet research" to try and get a handle on how to remove the stuff, but nothing I am trying is working.
I used a bit of a solvent based adhesive remover in a test spot - it turned the adhesive into a goo, and smeared it around really good, and worked it into the pores of the test square.
I tried soaking the slab in warm water, and then used a 4" bladed scraper to try and get the old adhesive up. I had moderate success with that, but holy **** is that a slow process! It is taking me about 20 minutes to scrape one 9"x9" area!
I obtained a sample of a product called Sentinel 747, and tried another test square tonight, but again, the results weren't great. I let it soak for about 30 min (the tech sheet said to let it sit 10-20 min). It removed some of the adhesive, but no more than scraping with just the warm water, and made a big mess too.
I'm about at my wits end with this stuff. I'm thinking of renting a diamond grinder and going to town. I know this cutback stuff *may* contain asbesots, but I figure if I seal the room well, and wear a full respirator suit while grinding, and then soak the slab and wet vac after the grind, the asbestos would be a non-issue.
The ultimate goal is to have a clean slab that I can stain and seal, or put an epoxy coating down on. The floor measures 20x12.
Have you guys run across this stuff? If so, what have you done to remove it? Anybody tried diamond grinding or shot blasting to get rid of this?
Thanks for the help...
Keith
I'm hoping for some guidance with a situation I've got to get resolved.
Recently, we had some really nasty wind and rain here in WA, and we had water leak into our family room through a crack in a foundation wall. I did not know we had a crack previously, but the crack has since been repaired and is no longer leaking.
The water saturated the carpet on the floor, so I removed the carpet. Under the carpet were 9x9 VCT tiles. They have all been removed as well.
The adhesive residue used to install the tiles is giving me problems. This stuff is black, smells like tar/asphalt, and is very hard. I did a little "crack internet research" to try and get a handle on how to remove the stuff, but nothing I am trying is working.
I used a bit of a solvent based adhesive remover in a test spot - it turned the adhesive into a goo, and smeared it around really good, and worked it into the pores of the test square.
I tried soaking the slab in warm water, and then used a 4" bladed scraper to try and get the old adhesive up. I had moderate success with that, but holy **** is that a slow process! It is taking me about 20 minutes to scrape one 9"x9" area!
I obtained a sample of a product called Sentinel 747, and tried another test square tonight, but again, the results weren't great. I let it soak for about 30 min (the tech sheet said to let it sit 10-20 min). It removed some of the adhesive, but no more than scraping with just the warm water, and made a big mess too.
I'm about at my wits end with this stuff. I'm thinking of renting a diamond grinder and going to town. I know this cutback stuff *may* contain asbesots, but I figure if I seal the room well, and wear a full respirator suit while grinding, and then soak the slab and wet vac after the grind, the asbestos would be a non-issue.
The ultimate goal is to have a clean slab that I can stain and seal, or put an epoxy coating down on. The floor measures 20x12.
Have you guys run across this stuff? If so, what have you done to remove it? Anybody tried diamond grinding or shot blasting to get rid of this?
Thanks for the help...
Keith

