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Roof Cement

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May 8, 2009 at 7:54 a.m.

OLE Willie

I don't use the stuff very often but have ran into a few situations recently where it was actually the best remedy on a couple repairs. The problem is i can not find any plastic roof cement anywhere around this area anymore that is not runny and way too wet. Plastic roof cement used to be harder and worked much better. I hate the runny schiat! lol I have gone back on a couple jobs where this crap was used and water is bleeding through the mess 6 months later because the schiat is still not hardened up! W.T.F. is up with this!>>>

May 17, 2009 at 6:33 p.m.

tinner666

All of them spread easy for me. If I put a bucket in my truck, unopened, and leave it that way, I will somehow spread it into my house and from a-hole to appetite on myself. Carpet and even the dog will share in my cement spreading endeavors. :blush:

( Wife wholeheartedly agreed with this post too.) :huh:>>>

May 17, 2009 at 12:24 a.m.

egg

:laugh: :laugh: :laugh: :laugh:>>>

May 16, 2009 at 9:31 p.m.

Mike H

"artiscally a'spreadin tha mamy ther "

LOL........ one of yer bess lines e'r, me lad. Fer sure.>>>

May 16, 2009 at 7:55 a.m.

Jack-Legge

Arrrr, well shiver me timberlines ther, we says for shure. Ahoy ther, Mister Copper, n proud of ye we be ther , we be for shure. jus member ta keep tha little pinkie extended when a'smear......er.......artiscally a'spreadin tha mamy ther , we says.

YO HO HO AN A BUCKET OF THA BLACK.....ARGH!>>>

May 12, 2009 at 5:30 a.m.

jfreynik

I use Henry 906 It has a tiny bit of solvent on top as it is a wet/dry patch cement. It has nice body and trowels nice and smooth. Ole Jack would be proud of me>>>

May 12, 2009 at 1:21 a.m.

egg

Hi, lanny. I assumed if his mastic was "runny and way too wet" that it was what Jed described as having "a little residual liquid on top." Usually that means it's 'wetpatch' which has more solvents to facilitate sticking on wet surfaces but I have seen plastic roof cement (not wetpatch) that was sloppy that way also, and like VT slater I have found Karnak pretty decent. All the modifieds seem to set up pretty quickly, even though they remain pliable. The slurpier it is the less we better use. I have reached a point where I use so little of any of the cutback products that it's not a live issue for me but in the past I have often solved the viscosity problem merely by allowing some of the solvents to take voluntary leave on their own time. I'm sure there's more chemistry to it than I am giving the mastic kings credit for, but I just strained and resurrected a thirty-year collection of latex and solvent-based paints during the last two weeks, and more often than not brute force and awkwardness will more than have its way with these baseline products, despite how strenuously any experts might object. They don't hold up to UV. They're not a membrane unto themselves. The solvents in them dissolve asphalt products. I use the runny stuff with glassply to achieve absolutely killer patchwork on built-up roofs, along with a lot of working it with a trowel to express it through the glass, but even then, it doesn't take a huge amount of it. All the excess gets screeded off and returned to the can. In a perverse sort of way, mastic that is too runny actually forces us not to use too much of it which is a good thing. Flashing compound used to work well in a lot of cases.>>>

May 11, 2009 at 7:27 p.m.

OLE Willie

Yeah Henry was the other good brand. Henry or Mulehide. I cant find either one around here anymore! Grrrrrr!!!! Nothing but runny azzzz shiatt!!! :woohoo:>>>

May 11, 2009 at 2:24 p.m.

Jed

The bull we get usually has a little residual liquid on top Lanny, you'd have to threaten me with water boarding to make me stir it though. :laugh:>>>

May 11, 2009 at 10:38 a.m.

elcid

To stiffen up summer roof cement (muck) my guys would use gypsum or any other suitable talc. Oldtimers used asbestos before it was banned.>>>

May 11, 2009 at 10:10 a.m.

lanny

Solvent???Stir??? ---You are using something completely different than I am. What we use never has anything liquid on top and stirring would be impossible. Lanny>>>

May 10, 2009 at 12:03 p.m.

VT_country_slater

egg Said: If you are in a pinch and dont mind a McGuyver-type solution, open up a couple of new cans, drain off any excess solvent on the top, and leave the lid off for a couple of days. Check it every now and then. Stir it as needed. When it has reached the consistency you want, trowel the top level-smooth, pour in an inch of water to cover it, and replace the lids. Enjoy.

I tried that thinking the same ting, but when it got up around 100f some how it ran. I use Karnak and have good luck so far.>>>

May 10, 2009 at 10:46 a.m.

egg

If you are in a pinch and don't mind a McGuyver-type solution, open up a couple of new cans, drain off any excess solvent on the top, and leave the lid off for a couple of days. Check it every now and then. Stir it as needed. When it has reached the consistency you want, trowel the top level-smooth, pour in an inch of water to cover it, and replace the lids. Enjoy.>>>

May 10, 2009 at 7:23 a.m.

Roof Doctors USA

The S.O.B.'s that work for me call it "Cement Roof". It always takes me a moment to figure out what they are saying. :laugh:>>>

May 9, 2009 at 7:08 p.m.

lanny

---I got a deal on a pallet of Henry's wet patch ahwile back. Always up for a deal. Nice and thick, can be applied to wet surfaces, dries firm. I once got into a can of lap seal by mistake as the label had dropped off and that made a real mess...runny...wouldn't firm up...ugh. Lanny>>>

May 9, 2009 at 4:34 p.m.

OLE Willie

Yeah i think the stuff i used to like was made by MuleHide. It was wet/dry plastic cement. Can't find it anymore! :woohoo:>>>


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