frog_hopper
3rd April 2008, 04:03 PM
Hi,
Does anyone have experience with using a mineral silicate type paint? (commonly in Europe). Porters paints make this type of paint here in Australia. Just wondering if there are any negatives to this type paint?
It is supposed to last for 10 years or so (a lot longer than other masonry pains) and copes well with moisture - allowing the walls / bricks to breathe.
Why am I considering thie type of paint - I have seen several brick houses that have been painted / rendered, and the paint always seems to be flaking down near the ground level (think this is because of moisture coming up from the ground). This other stuff allows the bricks to breath.
This is what porter's paints say about it ....
"Porter's Mineral Paint is a premium silicate paint, providing unparalleled colourfastness and excellent durability. Mineral Paint chemically reacts with the substrate and the result is that the cured paint forms an inorganic structure with a very strong bond to the substrate which cannot crack, peel or flake."
Anyone?
Does anyone have experience with using a mineral silicate type paint? (commonly in Europe). Porters paints make this type of paint here in Australia. Just wondering if there are any negatives to this type paint?
It is supposed to last for 10 years or so (a lot longer than other masonry pains) and copes well with moisture - allowing the walls / bricks to breathe.
Why am I considering thie type of paint - I have seen several brick houses that have been painted / rendered, and the paint always seems to be flaking down near the ground level (think this is because of moisture coming up from the ground). This other stuff allows the bricks to breath.
This is what porter's paints say about it ....
"Porter's Mineral Paint is a premium silicate paint, providing unparalleled colourfastness and excellent durability. Mineral Paint chemically reacts with the substrate and the result is that the cured paint forms an inorganic structure with a very strong bond to the substrate which cannot crack, peel or flake."
Anyone?