Search Results for: stop and seal waterproofing

Modern concrete apartment building under clear blue sky

Chloride Contamination in Concrete Near Salt: Symptoms, Tests, and Mitigation Options

Introduction Chloride contamination in concrete near salt means chloride ions from road salt, seawater, or deicing materials have migrated into the concrete and can trigger corrosion of embedded steel; check product labels, manufacturer guidance, and local rules to know acceptable chloride limits. On a DIY job that usually shows up as rust stains, spalled or […]

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Worker pouring concrete over exposed rebar grid

Concrete Spall Repair with Rebar Exposure: Cleaning, Passivation, and Patch Build-Up

Introduction Concrete spall repair with rebar exposure means removing loose concrete, cleaning and protecting any exposed steel, and rebuilding the patch so the surface is sound and bonded. In DIY terms that means chipping out unsound material, getting the rebar clean and passivated, and building the repair in layers so it cures properly. Check product

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Concrete wall surface with multiple small holes and rough texture

Form Tie Holes on Concrete Walls: Clean Fill Techniques That Don’t Halo After Sealing

Introduction Form tie holes on concrete walls are the small openings left where form ties passed through the forms, and cleaning and filling them correctly prevents staining and “halos” after you seal the wall. For a DIYer that means choosing a compatible fill material, preparing the hole and surrounding concrete, and using application techniques that

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Brick wall with exposed rebar frame against blue sky

Repairing Settlement Cracks Along a Garage Stem Wall: Drainage Checks and Patch Strategy

Introduction Repairing settlement cracks along a garage stem wall means checking why water is pooling, fixing drainage, and then sealing and patching the cracks so the wall stops moving and water stops getting in. Start by looking for low spots, clogged drains, downspouts that dump by the foundation, and any gaps at the slab-wall joint,

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Wooden concrete forms with rebar and soil inside foundation trenches

Concrete Capillary Breaks at Foundation Walls: Gravel, Footing Drains, and Wicking Prevention

Introduction Concrete capillary breaks at foundation walls are measures that stop water from wicking up through concrete by interrupting the tiny pathways in and around the footing and wall. In practice that means using a combination of granular backfill, a drainage layer next to the footing, and details at the wall/soil interface to prevent water

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Concrete wall surface with visible spalling damage

Concrete Spalling at Reentrant Corners: How to Cut Relief Joints That Stop Repeat Damage

Introduction Concrete spalling at reentrant corners is surface and edge breakdown where the inside corner of a slab or wall flakes, chips, or crumbles, and relief joints are cuts you make to interrupt stress paths so the same spot doesn’t fail again. In plain terms: you cut a controlled weak line near the corner to

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Close-up of weathered wooden fence post with barbed wire and grass

Installing a Handrail Post in Concrete: Sleeves, Water Seals, and Freeze-Thaw Details

Introduction Installing a handrail post in concrete means setting a strong anchor that resists forces and stays watertight through freeze–thaw cycles; it’s done by using a post sleeve or flange, sealing the joint, and backfilling or grouting properly. Think like a foreman: plan the hole or sleeve position, choose a sealing method, and follow product

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Hand holding a rusty trowel on a stucco surface

Stucco Layers and Purpose: How Each Coat Works and What Failures Look Like When One Is Wrong

Introduction Stucco layers are a sequence of coats—usually a scratch or bonding layer, a brown or leveling layer, and a finish coat—each serving to bond, build thickness, and protect or texture the wall. In plain jobsite terms: the first coat grabs the mesh and substrate, the middle builds out thickness and straightens the plane, and

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Wall with a long crack near a window frame

Plaster Cracks That Keep Coming Back: Movement Checks, Mesh Options, and Control-Joint Alternatives

Introduction Plaster cracks that keep coming back are usually signs of ongoing movement—either structural, thermal, or moisture-related—rather than a one-off surface failure. In plain terms: fix the movement first, then choose a flexible joint compound or mesh to bridge how much movement you expect and follow the product label for prep and cure times. Check

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