Posts tagged ‘mildew’

Bathroom Dont’s – Sealant Products To AVOID This Christmas

My hun and I just spent an absolutely loverly experience in our bathroom.  And in spite of what you think, no, that didn’t happen.  The bathroom just isn’t big enough.

What did happen is that the old bathtub/shower “sealant” (if you can even call it that) failed.  Miserably.  Only we couldn’t really tell until it was well too late in the failure.  Why?  Because it still looked in tact.  What was this horrid product that failed and let water through like a sieve but looked fine?

Why, it was some evil kind of bathroom sealer trim tape.

Tape is NOT a good bathtub sealant!

This stuff was awful.  Once we pealed it away, there was just sooooo much groty mildew growing behind it.  It was nasty!  And it couldn’t have lasted all that long.  We weren’t the dipsh__ts that put it down in the first place.  We only just bought the house a year ago.  This was one of those things I had to mock when I saw it.  And now that I’ve had to clean up after it?

Tape!

You don’t freaking caulk a bathtub / shower with TAPE!

Maybe a product like that might serve a purpose.  Somewhere.  But most certainly not in a bathtub.  I’d say leave it out of the bathroom entirely.

So, the bathtub needed recaulking.  Obviously.  Which required a nasty, messy, gross, allergenic clean up.  With plenty of bleach to kill all of the living organisms.  That sounds bad.

But not nearly as bad as putting down the damn caulk!

Here’s a tip.  Unless you have a shower that you desperately need to use just hours after caulking, do not, I repeat: do not use Polyseamseal Speed Seal Silicone Sealant.  Yes, it’s claim to fame is that it can fast-dry in 2 hours.  And at ten bucks a tube you figure it has to be quality.

Polyseamseal Speed Seal Silicone Sealant will KILL you by DESTROYING your throat!

Well maybe so, but I’ve never had a caulk that tried to kill me like this stuff did.  You don’t just want to open a window.  You want SCUBA gear!  Seriously.  This stuff will rip your throat raw in no time, the fumes are that nasty.  A day later and I still have a sore throat.

But wait!  That’s not all!

It also applies like glue!  You know how silicone caulk just glides right on.  It’s so smooth and creamy.  You could practically just shape it with your finger.  You almost don’t even need a tool to make it look professional.  Well with this stuff, forget all that!  It’s like a cross between glue and silly putty.  It sticks to everything except the tub.  It pulls its own bead out at the drop of a hat.  It gunks up.  Don’t even bother trying your finger.  No, with this stuff you need a tool, and you need a ton of paper towels to tear into bits to keep wiping that tool with.  It is by far the hardest caulk I’ve ever had to work with.

And that two hours that you can shower in?  Well don’t think of laying that bead of caulk too far ahead of yourself, because that stuff hardens in like five minutes.  So you’ve got to just go tiny inch by freaking inch with a fine-toothed-comb with that stuff or it’ll harden on you before you’ve shaped it into a professional looking line, and then you’ll just have to rip it out and do it again.

Seriously.  If you have the time for caulk to dry, get the normal stuff.  This speed seal is a nightmare to work with!

But in the end, yes, my hun and I managed to successfully recaulk our bathtub.  It took a lot of cleaning.  It took a lot of patience.  It took a lot of time.  And it nearly put us both into the hospital.  But we got it done!  And I can practically guarantee that if you avoid these two “time saving” conveneince products when you (re)caulk your bathtub or shower, you will get it done in a lot less time and have much less reason to complain afterward.

Sometimes technology brings us many great things.

And sometimes technology claims to bring us something great and then kicks us in the family jewels when we’re not looking.

Burnt Out

Faithful readers may have noticed that I haven’t been writing as much as I usually do lately. The problem is, I’m burnt out. On computers.

It happens. Every so often I just go through a phase where I’m basically sick of computers. For a computer programmer, it’s not exactly conducive to work, which poses a bit of a problem. The only real solution is just to use computers as little as possible and basically do other things. You know. Life. For example during these times I love to cook and I love to read. I also like to get out and do stuff, like go for a walk, or a swim.

Only this time around I’ve been more house-bound than usual because it has also coincided with being generally sick. With my allergies combined with Pennsylvania’s rampant warm winter/spring so far, there’s been a lot of pollen, mold, mildew, and disease in the air. Viruses and bacteria didn’t get a good solid deep freeze over the winter, so they’re a little too vibrant this spring. As are the trees and plants. And with all that nice weather combined with humidity and rain, even the mildew is going strong. Most people are having a darn time of colds and flus. With my allergies on top of it (and I’m allergic to darn near everything: dust, dander, mold, mildew, pollen, etc.) I’m just happy to still be alive. But for weeks now I’ve had a rough voice from coughing a fair bit. And I don’t even smoke!

So I’ve been feeling like crap, on top of being sick of computers. Mostly that makes for a lot of reading and TV watching … when I’m not working of course. Lazy lazy. But what am I to do? It’s a good thing I just picked up The Great Book of Amber (which is basically just a reprint of all 10 of the Amber books in one big book) by Roger Zelazny. I highly recommend the read. Roger Zelazny is a genius in my opinion and the Amber books are just marvelously imaginative.

But anyway, so that’s been my sitch. I’ve just been plum burnt out on computers. I’m tired of pixels and electrons. I’m sick of staring at a screen. And I have to wonder, am I the only computer geek that gets that way? Or is it something that happens to even the best of us? Is it a geek thing? Or is it a human thing? Could it be that the human body simply doesn’t like sitting there looking at a glowing screen all day? Or even that the human brain doesn’t like something about the setup? It makes me wonder. What about you?