Joe,

 

There are several things I will comment on, first usually a good alkaline stripper will remove most of the seal that may still be on the grout. If you are seeing a seal on the grout you may have something other than a silicone sealer. You may have an epoxy or polyurethane sealer on the grout. In these cases you going to need something stronger than a Alkaline striper and will probably need a methylamine based stripper. Or the Beanie Doo product I’ve been told works fairly. One other way to check to see if the seal on topical or not place some acid on the grout to see what happens , if nothing happens it probably still coated , unless it an epoxy grout .

 

If you are going to clean and reseal with an impregnating seal and there is no epoxy or polyurethane seal on the grout , then go in clean the tile and the grout and re-seal.

 

That being said, the grout over time will get dirty again, my next recommendation would be to ColorSeal the grout using the Grout Perfect Grout coloring system.

This does several things:

1.       Give the grout a new look

2.       The customer can change the color if they wish

3.       Eliminate the inconsistency in the grout when you only clean ( some areas will clean up better then other)

4.       Make the cleaning by the customer a much easier process.

 

If you are not currently doing Grout coloring services I HIGHLY recommend you start. Just as stone chemicals the grout coloring chemicals are not created the same, I have tried several products on the market and found the Grout Perfect product to be the best in coverage, the easiest to  apply and the easiest to clean up.

 

Currently in our restoration company we are doing 25 to 30 % of our business Grout color sealing services. If you are already in the customers home selling your marble services why not sell  your grout services for the ceramic tile?

 

 

John E. Freitag

President/Director

The Stone and Tile School

Office 407-567-7652

Cell 407-615-0134

jfreitag@thestoneandtileschool.com

 

schoollogo

 

www.thestoneandtileschool.com

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



-----Original Message-----
From: Dr Fred <fhueston@stoneandtilepros.com>
To: Restoration and Maintenance <sccpartners@stoneandtilepros.com>
Sent: Tue, Sep 1, 2009 5:20 am
Subject: RE: [sccpartners] Silicone Sealer

Joe,

its hard to tell if its silcone or not, but place some water on the grout and see if it absorbs,,if it doesnt it is sealed. try striping first with a good stripper and retest. 

On Tue, Sep 1, 2009 at 2:17 AM, Stone & Grout Meister <mail@stoneandgroutmeister.com> wrote:

I'm getting ready to clean and seal about 400 sq ft of ceramic floor tile. The grout appears to have a sealer on it, in some areas the sealer has broken down. I think the sealer is a silicone base. Is their a quick and easy way to determine if it is a silicone sealer? How long does a silicone sealer last under normal foot traffic in a residential setting using the proper cleaning products compared to a penetrating sealer? Could a fluoropolymer penetrating sealer be applied to the grout without stripping the silicone sealer? Does anyone know of a silicone sealer that I could buy off the shelf at a big box store? Thanks......


Joe Walters
Stone & Grout Meister, LLC

Tel: 505-890-3835
Cell: 505-859-0196
Fax: 866-920-2135
mail@stoneandgroutmeister.co
www.stoneandgroutmeister.com

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Frederick M. Hueston PhD
www.stoneforensics.com
www.stoneandtilepros.com
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