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How to move cement from bath/tiles
johnniegif
Posts: 127 Forumite
I recently had my bedroom 'tanked' and the builders splashed cement/render all over my ensuite bathroom. I am finding it particularly hard to remove from the inside of my bath and the wall tiles as the spalshes are stuck hard.
Can anyone suggest a good way to get these off without scratching the bath/tiles?
Thanks for your help.
Johnnie
Can anyone suggest a good way to get these off without scratching the bath/tiles?
Thanks for your help.
Johnnie
0
Comments
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Jet washer0
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Thanks for the suggestions. Its an enameled bath and I don't want to damage it.
I've tried hot water, various cleaning solutions and a scrubbing brush, but I cannot move the most stubborn splashes. I might try with a steam cleaner too.
Wouldn't a metal scraper scratch the tiles?
Thanks again.
Johnnie0 -
Try a mortar and scale cleaner - focus b&q should have it in stock its an acid so be careful!0
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You need very hard metall to scratch ceramic tiles. Even usual drill bit for metall cannot do this. Only special masonry one. The same with metall enameled bath. However, if sand was added to cement, grains of sand can scratch. Just try in one small area and you will see.johnniegif wrote:Wouldn't a metal scraper scratch the tiles?
Don't waste time with steam cleaner. Some chemicals could possibly help. I'd try also some acid, for example, scale remover.0 -
Try oil of orange cleaner."This site is addictive!"
Wooligan 2 squares for smoky - 3 squares for HTA
Preemie hats - 2.0 -
Thanks again. I spent around two and half hours with the steam cleaner, combned with VIM, limescale remover and Flash bathroom liquid. It made a difference but not enough to get rid of the mess. I was cursing my builders! The cement/mortar acid sounds like the best bet, although I will go carefully with it. Note to self: make sure the mother in law doesn't take a bath while I'm cleaning

Thanks for all your suggestions.
Johnnie0 -
thanked for the mother in law crack.
Brick acid or patio cleaner will do it, you just paint it on with a small brush , use gloves keep the window open it stinks a bit in use. You actually see the cement bubbling out of it. It doesnt touch most other things than cement.0
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