DUH! So this is like Dow Corning All Gard, which competes against acrylic elastomeric coatings. Only problem I see with that approach is that once coated with silicone, nothing else is likely to be able to adhere for recoating.

As for EIFS, most of these systems are little more than highly sanded acrylic latex paint, and the same repair can be done with acrylic elastomerics. That preserves the potential to recoat eventually, for whichever EIFS buildings aren't going to be demolished before the paint job wears out.

Mike E
---------- Original Message -----------
From: [log in to unmask] 
To: [log in to unmask] 
Sent: Sun, 13 Jul 2008 15:52:00 EDT 
Subject: Re: [BP] Breathable and Waterproof

> 
>   
> My understanding is that the "breathable" and "waterproof" silicones the GE engineer was talking about were in the coating range, and were separate from their sealant thicknesses. Whether the same coating in the same thickness is BOTH breathable and waterproof, I'm not sure. 
>   
> He said there's some guy somewhere in the British Isles (maybe Ireland) buying it for use as a coating for metal roofs, which made sense to me.  He also said it had been used as a repair coating (with thicker, prefabricated strips used to cover joints) in EIFS.  Given the problems with EIFS, that sounded promising, too. 
>   
> Ralph 
>  

 

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