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Re: Masonry help?!
[Re: Jim H]
#7919938
08/03/23 09:19 PM
08/03/23 09:19 PM
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Posco
Unregistered
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Posco
Unregistered
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That's a mess. Masonry block don't hold up well in the elements. Brick chimneys can go a hundred years or more but you're lucky to get twenty-five out of block. We used to use an adititive called C-21 if I remember right. It was a bonding agent we used on chimney caps. It really helps mortar adhere. You either tear it down and start from scratch or parge it again.
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Re: Masonry help?!
[Re: Jim H]
#7919945
08/03/23 09:22 PM
08/03/23 09:22 PM
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Joined: Jan 2020
Aliceville, Kansas 45
Yukon John
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Jan 2020
Aliceville, Kansas 45
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Knock it down, and replace with dbl wall insulated, and box it with your preferred asthetic if necessary.
Act like a blank, get treated like a blank. Insert your own blank!
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Re: Masonry help?!
[Re: Jim H]
#7919951
08/03/23 09:26 PM
08/03/23 09:26 PM
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Joined: Dec 2006
St. Louis Co, Mo
BigBob
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
St. Louis Co, Mo
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Somebody else was looking to get away with a couple of year fix too, I think it needs to be stripped clean and resurfaced with stucco.
Every kid needs a Dog and a Curmudgeon.
Remember Bowe Bergdahl, the traitor.
Beware! Jill Pudlewski, Ron Oates and Keven Begesse are liars and thiefs!
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Re: Masonry help?!
[Re: Jim H]
#7919957
08/03/23 09:34 PM
08/03/23 09:34 PM
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Posco
Unregistered
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Posco
Unregistered
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We repaired a chimney top in southern Maine some years back. My attentive buddy noticed a brick with an inscription on it. The original mason had inscribed the brick with his name and the date before the brick was fired. It dated to the mid 1850's.
My idea of the perfect outside stack would be a brick shell with a stainless liner.
The stucco is a good idea.
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Re: Masonry help?!
[Re: Yukon John]
#7919963
08/03/23 09:40 PM
08/03/23 09:40 PM
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Joined: Oct 2011
New York
Jim H
OP
trapper
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OP
trapper
Joined: Oct 2011
New York
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Knock it down, and replace with dbl wall insulated, and box it with your preferred asthetic if necessary. This is what I thought too. I'll probably let it go until spring and just go double wall and box it in. Thanks guys! As always, the best resource around!
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Re: Masonry help?!
[Re: Jim H]
#7919994
08/03/23 10:01 PM
08/03/23 10:01 PM
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Posco
Unregistered
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Posco
Unregistered
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Posco, box it with clay bricks? I prefer solids. I think they're less susceptible to moisture, freeze/thaw and they take up less mortar. I like waterstruck (molded) as opposed to an extruded brick.
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Re: Masonry help?!
[Re: Jim H]
#7919997
08/03/23 10:02 PM
08/03/23 10:02 PM
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Posco
Unregistered
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Posco
Unregistered
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I should have added, it only vents an oil fired boiler, nothing else. Do I even need to run it up above the roof line? Is there an alternative? Code requires it if that's a concern.
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Re: Masonry help?!
[Re: ]
#7919999
08/03/23 10:05 PM
08/03/23 10:05 PM
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Joined: Oct 2011
New York
Jim H
OP
trapper
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OP
trapper
Joined: Oct 2011
New York
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I should have added, it only vents an oil fired boiler, nothing else. Do I even need to run it up above the roof line? Is there an alternative? Code requires it if that's a concern. Yeah, I want to keep it to code. If I ever decide to sell and move out of New Yorkistan, I want to minimize my problems!
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Re: Masonry help?!
[Re: Jim H]
#7920000
08/03/23 10:07 PM
08/03/23 10:07 PM
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Joined: Dec 2006
NWWA/AZ
Vinke
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
NWWA/AZ
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Lick and stick fake stone would be easy but the corners are expensive It could be wrapped in wood using furring
The roof tie in is the only thing a monkey could not do
Ant Man/ Marty 2028 just put your ear to the ground , and follow along
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Re: Masonry help?!
[Re: Jim H]
#7920002
08/03/23 10:09 PM
08/03/23 10:09 PM
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Posco
Unregistered
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Posco
Unregistered
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Can you negotiate it with a buyer or does the bank want it done before a sale? There's no cheap fix there unless you're handy yourself.
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Re: Masonry help?!
[Re: Jim H]
#7920068
08/03/23 11:34 PM
08/03/23 11:34 PM
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Joined: Apr 2013
Twin Cities, MN
Nate L
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Apr 2013
Twin Cities, MN
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It will probably be a difficult fix. In order to get something to stick to that you will need to remove any loose material and then use a bonding agent to get the new coat to stick well. A good quality acrylic polymer added to your mix and maybe an epoxy bonding aid. Below are some products I used in a previous life. Not sure where you could source them now. Relay ResurfacerForton Acrylic AdditiveSikadur Epoxy BonderAnother option would be to cover the whole thing in diamond lathe and recoat it. If you do that it would take two coats. A scratch coat first and then a finish coat.
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Re: Masonry help?!
[Re: Nate L]
#7920166
08/04/23 07:34 AM
08/04/23 07:34 AM
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Joined: Dec 2006
SEPA
Lugnut
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
SEPA
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It will probably be a difficult fix. In order to get something to stick to that you will need to remove any loose material and then use a bonding agent to get the new coat to stick well.
Another option would be to cover the whole thing in diamond lathe and recoat it. If you do that it would take two coats. A scratch coat first and then a finish coat.
Attaching steel lath and doing a two-part parge was my first thought when I looked at the picture. It looks like it is built of cinder blocks and not modern concrete masonry units/modern building blocks. Cinderblocks are known to just start deteriorating after a certain period of time. I pity folks who have basements built out of them. I have resurfaced many chimneys that looked like yours by attaching steel lath and using a good concrete bonder in the parge coats.
Eh...wot?
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Re: Masonry help?!
[Re: ]
#7920422
08/04/23 02:07 PM
08/04/23 02:07 PM
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Joined: Oct 2011
New York
Jim H
OP
trapper
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OP
trapper
Joined: Oct 2011
New York
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It will probably be a difficult fix. In order to get something to stick to that you will need to remove any loose material and then use a bonding agent to get the new coat to stick well.
Another option would be to cover the whole thing in diamond lathe and recoat it. If you do that it would take two coats. A scratch coat first and then a finish coat.
Attaching steel lath and doing a two-part parge was my first thought when I looked at the picture. It looks like it is built of cinder blocks and not modern concrete masonry units/modern building blocks. Cinderblocks are known to just start deteriorating after a certain period of time. I pity folks who have basements built out of them. I have resurfaced many chimneys that looked like yours by attaching steel lath and using a good concrete bonder in the parge coats. Thanks guys! I'll try the lath and if that doesn't work then I'll just box it in. Can you negotiate it with a buyer or does the bank want it done before a sale? There's no cheap fix there unless you're handy yourself. It's not for a sale, I'm tried of looking at it and now it looks worse than when I started.
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Re: Masonry help?!
[Re: Jim H]
#7920554
08/04/23 04:48 PM
08/04/23 04:48 PM
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Joined: Oct 2021
Minnesota
Northernbeaver
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Oct 2021
Minnesota
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It's in that condition because it is venting an oil fueled appliance. New York's freeze and thaw climate doesn't help it at all either. It needs a SS liner. Terra cota flues do not hold up to the products of combustion given off by burned oil. The main issue is that burned oil gives off sulfer dioxide and when combined with water it forms sulferic acid and eats away at the structure. All you see is the exterior damage, the interior portion that contains the products of combustion is likely in shambles. Don't believe me? Crawl on the roof and look down inside or contact a CSIA or NCSG certified technician to come on site and run a camera through it to give an estimate.
All chimneys need to meet the 3-2-10 rule. 3 feet out of the roof minimum and 2 feet higher than ant part of the structure within 10 feet.
The entire chimney structure needs to be tore down and rebuilt and an SS liner dropped and hooked into the fuel oil appliance. I know chimney prices in NY are similar to MN. Expect to pay approximately 6-9,000.00 for such work. Price depends on height and access. An oil grade insulated pipe properly installed might be less but it doesn't accommodate for the siding behind it that will be either non existent or discolered to the rest. A chase would need to be built and that would likely end up costing more but I am uncertain, that is outside of my line of work.
Last edited by Northernbeaver; 08/04/23 04:51 PM.
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