Hi Folks
I am having a great deal of difficulty with the cement my local supplier is now providing which I am using to make a lime mortar. I am using this as I have a Victorian terraced house which largely seems to have stayed standing largely due to the 'flexibility'/accomodation of such a mix.
Originally, they were supplying me with Lafarge Mastercrete, which I was mixing 6:1:1 sand, cement, hydraulic lime. Now they have switched to Rugby cement (not the Premium), which seems to have very poor cohesion and workability. I am really struggling to work the stuff into a 'sausage' to make a 'fat' mortar, get it to stay on the trowel or stick to anything much. I expect it should have a butter-like consistency, which I could get with the previous mix. I had previously added some Adabond in error which makes it even better, though I understand you should not add this if you are making a lime mortar.
There does seem to be some confusion between hydraulic and hydrated lime. I have tried the Rugby stuff with hydrated lime as well after their helpline said I should use this and it would work 'no problem', but I got the same problems. The mortar tries to 'fall apart' before I even get it off the mixing board. It may be necessary to make a wetter mix with this material, but I think that is a bad idea. I am going to have 35m2 of re-pointing to do at some stage, and it is looking to be a nightmare unless I can find a solution (I understand some experts can do 70m2 a day!!).
Should I only be using Rugby Premium, or is there something else I am doing wrong? One fella at the merchants said I should use more cement, but it is already coming out with a greenish tinge, which I think is a sign that I am using too much. I am being very careful about measuring the correct proportions.
I am keen to avoid all this standing overnight with lime mixes, although ultimately I'd like to use a solution that works and is practical. Just to mention, for the front elevation I am planning a tinted mix with some ash and lime colourant (for accurate colour consistency) to produce a dark grey colour to set off the facing bricks. I don't know if you think that issue should affect the mix (or procedures) I should be using.
Thanks! -Molesy.
I am having a great deal of difficulty with the cement my local supplier is now providing which I am using to make a lime mortar. I am using this as I have a Victorian terraced house which largely seems to have stayed standing largely due to the 'flexibility'/accomodation of such a mix.
Originally, they were supplying me with Lafarge Mastercrete, which I was mixing 6:1:1 sand, cement, hydraulic lime. Now they have switched to Rugby cement (not the Premium), which seems to have very poor cohesion and workability. I am really struggling to work the stuff into a 'sausage' to make a 'fat' mortar, get it to stay on the trowel or stick to anything much. I expect it should have a butter-like consistency, which I could get with the previous mix. I had previously added some Adabond in error which makes it even better, though I understand you should not add this if you are making a lime mortar.
There does seem to be some confusion between hydraulic and hydrated lime. I have tried the Rugby stuff with hydrated lime as well after their helpline said I should use this and it would work 'no problem', but I got the same problems. The mortar tries to 'fall apart' before I even get it off the mixing board. It may be necessary to make a wetter mix with this material, but I think that is a bad idea. I am going to have 35m2 of re-pointing to do at some stage, and it is looking to be a nightmare unless I can find a solution (I understand some experts can do 70m2 a day!!).
Should I only be using Rugby Premium, or is there something else I am doing wrong? One fella at the merchants said I should use more cement, but it is already coming out with a greenish tinge, which I think is a sign that I am using too much. I am being very careful about measuring the correct proportions.
I am keen to avoid all this standing overnight with lime mixes, although ultimately I'd like to use a solution that works and is practical. Just to mention, for the front elevation I am planning a tinted mix with some ash and lime colourant (for accurate colour consistency) to produce a dark grey colour to set off the facing bricks. I don't know if you think that issue should affect the mix (or procedures) I should be using.
Thanks! -Molesy.