I could really do with some advice from people who know what they are talking about!
About 6 years ago I (foolishly) got a company called protectawall to coat the outside of my house with a "longlife" coating called protec. It was supposed to be fantastic, last more than 15 years (15 year warrenty) , not peel or flake etc etc. When I said I was thinking of getting a new door put in, and should I wait till after that to get the coating done I was told that for minor things like that they would come and make it good for me....
Anyway, the coating has never been very good. It has blistered, it has cracked... cracks in the render were never properly pinned. The company came back once to do some garuntee work. Then I finally got the door put in.... the coating pealed off in huge flakes - it really hadn't stuck on well at all.
When I contacted the company to get everything put right again, I have discovered that the original company has "gone bust", and therefor no work will be done under guarantee. But the son of the man who was running protectawall has a company called "Long Life Wall Coating" doing the same thing. And he gave me a quote to redo it all..... grrrrr
Well, I think I would do far better to stick to the cheaper alternative of paint seeing as the expensive stuff doesn't work anyway. However, I am clearly a bit naive and got led a dance once.... please could someone advise me with regards to the following so I don't get caught out again....
Will normal house paint stick to the oil based wall coating - or do I need a primer? Any advice on which paints and which primers are best?
Also, lots of the coating is really not stuck on to the wall, and coming off in flakes a foot across.... however I bet some of it sticks. Is it possible to remove the stuck on coating with sand blasting or similar, or if not how else do we cope with the surface flunctuations?
Thank you so much for your time.... I have just got it so wrong once before..... I really want to get it right this time....
About 6 years ago I (foolishly) got a company called protectawall to coat the outside of my house with a "longlife" coating called protec. It was supposed to be fantastic, last more than 15 years (15 year warrenty) , not peel or flake etc etc. When I said I was thinking of getting a new door put in, and should I wait till after that to get the coating done I was told that for minor things like that they would come and make it good for me....
Anyway, the coating has never been very good. It has blistered, it has cracked... cracks in the render were never properly pinned. The company came back once to do some garuntee work. Then I finally got the door put in.... the coating pealed off in huge flakes - it really hadn't stuck on well at all.
When I contacted the company to get everything put right again, I have discovered that the original company has "gone bust", and therefor no work will be done under guarantee. But the son of the man who was running protectawall has a company called "Long Life Wall Coating" doing the same thing. And he gave me a quote to redo it all..... grrrrr
Well, I think I would do far better to stick to the cheaper alternative of paint seeing as the expensive stuff doesn't work anyway. However, I am clearly a bit naive and got led a dance once.... please could someone advise me with regards to the following so I don't get caught out again....
Will normal house paint stick to the oil based wall coating - or do I need a primer? Any advice on which paints and which primers are best?
Also, lots of the coating is really not stuck on to the wall, and coming off in flakes a foot across.... however I bet some of it sticks. Is it possible to remove the stuck on coating with sand blasting or similar, or if not how else do we cope with the surface flunctuations?
Thank you so much for your time.... I have just got it so wrong once before..... I really want to get it right this time....
