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Does citralic need to be kept wet to work? - Jul 21st, 08, 08:38 AM

I know the efc-38 needs to be kept "wet" to do its work. Is it the same with the Citralic? If it dries fairly quickly will it still be working or not?



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Jul 21st, 08, 08:42 AM

Yes. Needs to be kept wet. If it begins to dry, you can mist it with water if you don't want it to get stronger. If you are not seeing any result yet, you can add more product.

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Last edited by Beth n Rod; Jul 21st, 08 at 08:47 AM.. Reason: added clarity
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Jul 21st, 08, 09:26 AM

By the time you have added citralic to a deck - you've pounded it with caustics, re-wetted it with caustics to keep the stripping/cleaning active - and then flooded a deck with water to rinse. By that time your deck is heavily saturated - a quick application of citralic will have completed it's job in ten minutes flat - there will be absolutely no drying issues at that point. Your only concern is to rinse off the deck quick enough to keep the citralic from over-neutralizing, that is if you mix it at it's prescribed strengths - which is far too strong for my taste buds.



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Jul 21st, 08, 09:34 AM

Daniel,
Depends on the temps on the deck and the wood itself. For example, an ipe deck will dry more quickly than say...cedar will.
Beth



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Jul 21st, 08, 05:30 PM

Beth - I wouldn't know, never worked on an ipe deck - Mohogany has been the closest wood I have worked on. But I am kind of spoiled - I downstream strippers and citralic - I can cover a huge deck in 2 minutes flat with oxalic - and then go to town rinsing real quick.



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Jul 21st, 08, 06:53 PM

Once the acid has changed the ph its job is finished on neutralizing. That is immediate. Brightening with acid is another matter far as how long..



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Jul 21st, 08, 07:33 PM

Interesting. We use citric acid, usually at 6 oz. / gallon. Apply then leave it on to dry. We do not rinse the acid off the wood with water.

This works very well with Ready Seal and I would presume other paraffinic oil stains. Not sure about linseed or other products.



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Jul 21st, 08, 07:48 PM

I believe it says on the Citralic label to rinse....
We have always rinsed.
Beth



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Jul 21st, 08, 08:11 PM

Beth,

You guys do not use paraffinic oil stains. At least with Ready Seal and straight citric, you do not want to rinse.



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Jul 21st, 08, 09:50 PM

Rick - what you have to understand is for us citralic users, we are buying a product with buffers and surfactants, basically a 'soap' mixed with our acids. You are using a 'straight' acid product. I don't think it wise to use an acid with a 'soap' mixed in and leave it there on the deck. I personally believe in an acid product with buffers and surfactants mixed into it. As well, when you neutralize the 'offspring' are 'salts' - and I don't want to mess around with what these 'salts' could do to a finish. Perhaps by using a straight citric acid vs. these other oxalic phosphorus brightening products, you don't have the same issues. And not to mention - a deck that has been thoroughly rinsed after the stripper application - what is really left to neutralize? I use to do full building paint removal with diedrich products left on overnight - and we always neutralized the product prior to removing. A citric acid applied to a deck after a thorough rinsing is perhaps not really neutralizing anything in all reality - and you are introducing Vitamin C into the wood, right? So maybe that's a really good thing to do. But for these oxalic products with buffers - it's a different story.

Incidently - Vitamin C neutralizes bleach residue in much the same way as Sodium Sulfite if you can believe it!!!!!!



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Jul 21st, 08, 10:24 PM

Daniel,

This is what has me confused. Bear with me, I got a "D" in college freshman chemistry. Classes at 8:00 AM a mile away did not help.

Two aspects of an acid application. It "neutralizes" or gets the pH down from caustic percarbs or NaOH strippers. In addition, it does have the ability to "brighten" or lighten the surface coloring of the wood, both softwoods and hardwoods.

So why the surfactants and soap? You have already cleaned or stripped the wood. Blew it off with a ton of water and some pressure. Why put "soap", whatever that is back on, and why the surfactants?

All I know is we have been using citric acid without rinsing and Ready Seal for close to 8 yrs. now. The process came from a few "old salt" contractors many years ago and it works. Our stain finishes last as long if not longer than most other contractors, certainly here in NJ's climate.



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Jul 22nd, 08, 12:24 AM

I can't speak for every finish but I know oxalic left on a protected surface (as in no rain to rinse it off) can haze a film based finish. I've seen it happen. Penetrating oils will for the most part allow the "salts" to rinse off in time whereas the filmers hold them under the finish potentially causing some unsightly issues.

I'm confused about the "soaps" myself. When I think of soaps it leads me to assume where talking about an alkaline base of some sort which I would expect to neutralize off the acidic nature of the acid. A blend of acids I can understand... just not the need for a surfactant in general.



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Jul 22nd, 08, 07:58 AM

Quote:
Originally Posted by Greg R View Post
I can't speak for every finish but I know oxalic left on a protected surface (as in no rain to rinse it off) can haze a film based finish. I've seen it happen. Penetrating oils will for the most part allow the "salts" to rinse off in time whereas the filmers hold them under the finish potentially causing some unsightly issues.

I'm confused about the "soaps" myself. When I think of soaps it leads me to assume where talking about an alkaline base of some sort which I would expect to neutralize off the acidic nature of the acid. A blend of acids I can understand... just not the need for a surfactant in general.
Thank you!!!

Beth



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Jul 22nd, 08, 08:21 AM

I have seen a crystaline haze or breakthrough of the finish around knots and sap veins when rinsing was not done thoroughly. Granted it wasn't RS but oil based products that use parrafin wax as the enviro-barrier.
With Citric, I don't see a problem but with Oxalic being left behind, uhuh! The stuff is poison and a liability.
my .02

Rod!~



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Jul 22nd, 08, 08:37 AM

Rick - most companies mix in surfactants with the acids for performance reasons, I think. Ask Russell why he does it, he knows better than I do.



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