Krusty
Well-Known Member
It\'s Oxalic-time again!
In recent years I've adopted Oxalic acid in solution, thickened with a little wallpaper paste, in preference to the costly stuff on chandlery shelves: thanks to advice on this forum.
I choose a dull damp day so that it has time to work its wonders before drying off, and have a hose rigged up and handy. Then work in panels; that is areas from toe-rail to waterlinw that I can cover without moving the step-ladder: paste panel 1; move; paste panel 2. Then into the repetitive sequence of paste panel 'n'; hose-off panel 'n-2'; move; paste 'n+1'...
I find that gives the stuff about three to four minutes to work, and it stays moist for at least that time, so it hoses off OK.
Once set up, I get round the hull in about an hour. Today I broke the sequence to take pictures before-and-after its 3-4 minutes work on waterline staining.
On reflection, it was well worth the time and small effort.
In recent years I've adopted Oxalic acid in solution, thickened with a little wallpaper paste, in preference to the costly stuff on chandlery shelves: thanks to advice on this forum.
I choose a dull damp day so that it has time to work its wonders before drying off, and have a hose rigged up and handy. Then work in panels; that is areas from toe-rail to waterlinw that I can cover without moving the step-ladder: paste panel 1; move; paste panel 2. Then into the repetitive sequence of paste panel 'n'; hose-off panel 'n-2'; move; paste 'n+1'...
I find that gives the stuff about three to four minutes to work, and it stays moist for at least that time, so it hoses off OK.
Once set up, I get round the hull in about an hour. Today I broke the sequence to take pictures before-and-after its 3-4 minutes work on waterline staining.
On reflection, it was well worth the time and small effort.