The Sherwin-Williams Company
101 Prospect Avenue
Cleveland, OH 44115
Toll-Free: (800) 321-8194
Tel: (216) 566-2505
Fax: (216) 566-1392
Web site: http://www.sherwin-williams.com
Remove mildew before painting by washing with a solution of 1 quart liquid household bleach and 3 quarts of warm water.
Apply the solution and scrub the mildewed area. Allow the solution to remain on the surface for 10 minutes. Rinse thoroughly
with clean water and allow the surface to dry 48 hours before painting. Wear protective glasses or goggles, waterproof gloves,
and protective clothing. Quickly wash off any of the mixture that comes in contact with your skin. Do not add detergents or
ammonia to the bleach/water solution.
No exterior painting should be done immediately after a rain, during foggy weather, when rain is predicted, or when the
temperature is below 50°F, unless the products to be used are designed to be used in those environments.
Remove all oil, grease, dirt, oxide and other foreign material by cleaning per SSPC-SP1, Solvent Cleaning.
Remove all loose mortar and foreign material. Surface must be free of laitance, concrete dust, dirt, form release agents,
moisture curing membranes, loose cement, and hardeners. Concrete and mortar must be cured at least 30 days at 75°F. The pH
of the surface should be between 6 and 9, unless the products to be used are designed to be used in high or low pH environments,
such as Loxon. On tilt-up and poured-in-place concrete, commercial detergents and abrasive blasting may be necessary
to prepare the surface. Fill bug holes, air pockets, and other voids with a patching compound such as ConSeal.
Must be free of dirt, loose and excess mortar, and foreign material. All brick should be allowed to weather for at least one year
followed by wire brushing to remove efflorescence. Treat the bare brick with one coat of Loxon Conditioner or Masonry
Conditioner.
This standard gives requirements for surface preparation of concrete by mechanical, chemical, or thermal methods prior to the
application of bonded protective coating or lining systems. The requirements of this standard are applicable to all types of
cementitious surfaces including cast-in-place concrete floors and walls, precast slabs, masonry walls and shotcrete surfaces. An
acceptable prepared concrete surface should be free of contaminants, laitance, loosely adhering concrete, and dust, and should
provide a sound, uniform substrate suitable for the application of protective coating or lining systems.
Remove all surface contamination by washing with an appropriate cleaner, rinse thoroughly and allow to dry. Existing peeled
or checked paint should be scraped and sanded to a sound surface. Glossy surfaces should be sanded dull. Pressure clean, if
needed, with a minimum of 2100 psi pressure to remove all dirt, dust, grease, oil, loose particles, laitance, foreign material, and
peeling or defective coatings. Allow the surface to dry thoroughly. If the surface is new, test it for pH, many times the pH may
be 10 or higher.
Remove all oil, grease, dirt, oxide and other foreign material by cleaning per SSPC-SP2, Hand Tool Cleaning.
Must be clean and dry. All nail heads must be set and spackled. Joints must be taped and covered with a joint compound.
Spackled nail heads and tape joints must be sanded smooth and all dust removed prior to painting. Exterior surfaces must be
spackled with exterior grade compounds.
Some composition boards may exude a waxy material that must be removed with a solvent prior to coating. Whether factory
primed or unprimed, exterior composition board siding (hardboard) must be cleaned thoroughly and primed with an alkyd
primer.
Allow to weather a minimum of 6 months prior to coating. Clean per SSPC-SP1 using detergent and water or a degreasing
cleaner, then prime as required. When weathering is not possible or the surface has been treated with chromates or silicates, first
Solvent Clean per SSPC-SP1 and apply a test area, priming as required. Allow the coating to dry at least one week before
testing. If adhesion is poor, Brush Blast per SSPC-SP7 is necessary to remove these treatments.
Must be allowed to dry thoroughly for at least 30 days before painting. Room
must be ventilated while drying; in cold, damp weather, rooms must be heated.
Damaged areas must be repaired with an appropriate patching material. Bare plaster
must be cured and hard. Textured, soft, porous, or powdery plaster should be treated
with a solution of 1 pint household vinegar to 1 gallon of water. Repeat until
the surface is hard, rinse with clear water and allow to dry.
Maintenance painting will frequently not permit or require complete removal
of all old coatings prior to repainting. However, all surface contamination such
as oil, grease, loose paint, mill scale dirt, foreign matter, rust, mold, mildew,
mortar, efflorescence, and sealers must be removed to assure sound bonding to
the tightly adhering old paint. Glossy surfaces of old paint films must be clean
and dull before repainting. Thorough washing with an abrasive cleanser will clean
and dull in one operation, or, wash thoroughly and dull by sanding. Spot prime
any bare areas with an appropriate primer. Recognize that any surface preparation
short of total removal of the old coating may compromise the service length of
the system. Check for compatibility by applying a test patch of the recommended
coating system, covering at least 2 to 3 square feet. Allow to dry one week before
testing adhesion per ASTM D3359. If the coating system is incompatible, complete
removal is required.
Should be cleaned by one or more of the nine surface preparations described
below. These methods were originally established by the Society for Protective
Coatings, and are used throughout the world for describing methods for cleaning
structural steel. Visual standards are available through the Society for Protective
Coatings; ask for SSPC-Vis 1-67T. A brief descriptions of these standards together
with numbers by which they can be specified follow.
Solvent cleaning is a method for removing all visible oil, grease, soil, drawing
and cutting compounds, and other soluble contaminants. Solvent cleaning does not
remove rust or mill scale. Change rags and cleaning solution frequently so that
deposits of oil and grease are not spread over additional areas in the cleaning
process. Be sure to allow adequate ventilation.
Hand Tool Cleaning removes all loose mill scale, loose rust, and other detrimental
foreign matter. It is not intended that adherent mill scale, rust, and paint be
removed by this process. Before hand tool cleaning, remove visible oil, grease,
soluble welding residues, and salts by the methods outlined in SSPC-SP1.
Power Tool Cleaning removes all loose mill scale, loose rust, and other detrimental
foreign matter. It is not intended that adherent mill scale, rust, and paint be
removed by this process. Before power tool cleaning, remove visible oil, grease,
soluble welding residues, and salts by the methods outlined in SSPC-SP1.
A White Metal Blast Cleaned surface, when viewed without magnification, shall
be free of all visible oil, grease, dirt, dust, mill scale, rust, paint, oxides,
corrosion products, and other foreign matter. Before blast cleaning, visible deposits
of oil or grease shall be removed by any of the methods specified in SSPC-SP1
or other agreed upon methods.
A Commercial Blast Cleaned surface, when viewed without magnification, shall
be free of all visible oil, grease, dirt, dust, mill scale, rust, paint, oxides,
corrosion products, and other foreign matter, except for staining. Staining shall
be limited to no more than 33 percent of each square inch of surface area and
may consist of light shadows, slight streaks, or minor discolorations caused by
stains of rust, stains of mill scale, or stains of previously applied paint. Before
blast cleaning, visible deposits of oil or grease shall be removed by any of the
methods specified in SSPC-SP1 or other agreed upon methods.
A Brush-Off Blast Cleaned surface, when viewed without magnification, shall
be free of all visible oil, grease, dirt, dust, loose mill scale, loose rust,
and loose paint. Tightly adherent mill scale, rust, and paint may remain on the
surface. Before blast cleaning, visible deposits of oil or grease shall be removed
by any of the methods specified in SSPC-SP1 or other agreed upon methods.
Metallic surfaces which are prepared according to this specification, when
viewed without magnification, shall be free of all visible oil, grease, dirt,
dust, mill scale, rust, paint, oxide corrosion products, and other foreign matter.
Slight residues of rust and paint may be left in the lower portions of pits if
the original surface is pitted. Prior to power tool surface preparation, remove
visible deposits of oil or grease by any of the methods specified in SSPC-SP1,
Solvent Cleaning, or other agreed upon methods.
A Near White Blast Cleaned surface, when viewed without magnification, shall
be free of all visible oil, grease, dirt, dust, mill scale, rust, paint, oxides,
corrosion products, and other foreign matter, except for staining. Staining shall
be limited to no more than 5 percent of each square inch of surface area and may
consist of light shadows, slight streaks, or minor discolorations caused by stains
of rust, stains of mill scale, or stains of previously applied paint. Before blast
cleaning, visible deposits of oil or grease shall be removed by any of the methods
specified in SSPC-SP1 or other agreed upon methods.
This standard gives requirements for industrial blast cleaning of unpainted
or painted steel surfaces by the use of abrasives. This joint standard allows
defined quantities of mill scale and/or old coating to remain on the surface.
An industrial blast cleaned surface, when viewed without magnification, shall
be free of all visible oil, grease, dust, and dirt. Traces of tightly adherent
mill scale, rust, and coating residue are permitted to remain on 10% of each unit
area of the surface. The traces of mill scale, rust, and coating shall be considered
tightly adherent if they cannot be lifted with a dull putty knife. Shadows, streaks,
and discolorations caused by stains of rust, stains of mill scale, and stains
of previously applied coating may be present on the remainder of the surface.
This standard provides requirements for the use of high- and ultra-high pressure
water jetting to achieve various degrees of surface cleanliness. This standard
is limited in scope to the use of water only without the addition of solid particles
in the stream.
Removal of oil grease dirt, loose rust, loose mill scale, and loose paint by
water at pressures of 2,000 to 2,500 psi at a flow of 4 to 14 gallons per minute.
Must be clean and free of any loose stucco. If recommended procedures for applying
stucco are followed, and normal drying conditions prevail, the surface may be
painted in 30 days. The pH of the surface should be between 6 and 9.
Must be clean and dry. Prime and paint as soon as possible. Knots and pitch
streaks must be scraped, sanded, and spot primed before a full priming coat is
applied. Patch all nail holes and imperfections with a wood filler or putty and
sand smooth. Caulk should be applied after priming.
All finishing lumber and flooring must be stored in dry, warm rooms to prevent
absorption of moisture, shrinkage, and roughening of the wood. All surfaces must
be sanded smooth, with the grain, never across it. Surface blemishes must be corrected
and the area cleaned of dust before coating.
Vinyl siding must be cleaned thoroughly by scrubbing with a warm, soapy water
solution. Rinse thoroughly.
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