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Top 10 Most Common House Paint Problems and How to Fix Them

By Bob Formisano, About.com

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Efflorescence

Paint Efflorescence

Paint Efflorescence

© Home-Cost.com 2006

Symptoms: Efflorescence
A problem of painted masonry construction, efflorescence is identifiable by crusty white salt deposits that bubble through the paint film from a masonry structure. Salts in the brick or concrete become dissolved with water and then leach to the surface as the water evaporates.

Potential Causes:

  • Poor paint surface preparation where prior efflorescence was not entirely removed and washed before the surface was repainted.
  • Heavy moisture migrating through exterior masonry walls from inside the home.
  • Inadequately waterproofed basement walls allowing ground water penetration.
  • Painting masonry construction before the concrete or mortar had adequately cured and dried out.
  • Cracks in masonry wall or poor tuckpointing is allowing water to get behind masonry wall.
Possible Repairs:
  • If moisture is getting into the masonry wall eliminate source of moisture by properly tuckpointing any cracks or missing mortar in the wall or patching concrete with a latex concrete patch, clean out gutters and downspouts, caulk joints around windows and doors with a butyl rubber caulk.
  • If moisture is migrating through the wall from the outside (e.g., basement wall), apply waterproofing to outside of wall.
  • Remove all efflorescence and loose flaking, chalking paint with a wire brush, scraping or power washing before repainting.
  • Clean area with a trisodium phosphate cleaning solution and rinse with clean water.
  • Let completely dry and paint with a high quality latex house paint.

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