lynnbilodeau
Well-known member
Short story: Need to permanently adhere natural stone to concrete blocks.
Long story: We terraced our back yard into four levels, and have put in 400 feet of block wall, using the locking Windsor stone type blocks. I have never liked the unfinished look of most Windsor walls, so we decided to cap with a natural stone. We used 12 x 12 tumbled silver mist stone about 2 inches thick. Yeah, the stone cost more than all the blocks but it gives it a great finished look.
I have already cut all of the stone and have it sitting on the block, but need to adhere it .... permanently. If I hit one with the mower, I don't want it to move.
If I had a small area, I would use one of the epoxy products in tubes, but believe that would be cost prohibitive for 400 feet of wall.
Seems like I remember a Sika product that came in 5 gallon buckets. Went to their website and couldn't find anything.
Any of you masonry pros have any suggestions. I am in Oklahoma, so it has to be able to live up to rain snow drought, severe heat (110) and cold (down to zero... yeah, I know that's not cold to you guys up North).
Thanks in advance for any help.
Long story: We terraced our back yard into four levels, and have put in 400 feet of block wall, using the locking Windsor stone type blocks. I have never liked the unfinished look of most Windsor walls, so we decided to cap with a natural stone. We used 12 x 12 tumbled silver mist stone about 2 inches thick. Yeah, the stone cost more than all the blocks but it gives it a great finished look.
I have already cut all of the stone and have it sitting on the block, but need to adhere it .... permanently. If I hit one with the mower, I don't want it to move.
If I had a small area, I would use one of the epoxy products in tubes, but believe that would be cost prohibitive for 400 feet of wall.
Seems like I remember a Sika product that came in 5 gallon buckets. Went to their website and couldn't find anything.
Any of you masonry pros have any suggestions. I am in Oklahoma, so it has to be able to live up to rain snow drought, severe heat (110) and cold (down to zero... yeah, I know that's not cold to you guys up North).
Thanks in advance for any help.



