GunnyButch Posted January 27, 2009 #1 Posted January 27, 2009 I'm starting to look at spring cleaning the outside of the house and need some advice. I have some lime/calcium deposits on the vinyl siding from the irrigation system and haven't been able to find anything to remove them without ruining the siding. Products like lime away and others say not to use them on vinyl siding. The JoMax cleaner I use cleans everything else, algae and such, but doesn't touch the calcium/lime scale. Does anyone know of something that works?
Kidh2 Posted January 27, 2009 #2 Posted January 27, 2009 There is a product called TSP (tri sodium phosphate) that works well. I use it on all my siding, soffat, gutters every spring and cleans them up real nice.
Dooder1 Posted January 27, 2009 #3 Posted January 27, 2009 How about vinegar thats what I use to clean the lime deposits in my coffee makers should be safe on the vinyl John
barend Posted January 27, 2009 #4 Posted January 27, 2009 Hope you can that that stuff off:080402gudl_prv:. Meanwhile, what, if anything have you done to prevent future buildup?? Adjusting spray patterns, changing nozzles or changing to a drip line (not soaker hose) are some options. Contact me if you feel I may be able to help.
GunnyButch Posted January 27, 2009 Author #5 Posted January 27, 2009 Thanks for the replies. I haven't tried TSP yet but was it was on my list of things to try, the vinegar solution I have tried but I will try going stronger on the mixture. I have replaced foundation sprinklers with soaker hoses where I can but there are still a few spray type heads needed.
craigatcsi Posted January 27, 2009 #6 Posted January 27, 2009 I switched from Lime-Away to Vinegar for my boat and it works great. - (Just rinse it well). I would put it in a sprayer and mist it on so you don't use so much. craigr
barend Posted January 27, 2009 #7 Posted January 27, 2009 I have replaced foundation sprinklers with soaker hoses where I can but there are still a few spray type heads needed. Keep in mind that you cannot mix spray heads and rotors in the same zone unless you use mixed precip heads. Drip should always be a seperate zone. You'll not be able to water anything right. I do not advocate soakers, they tend to water OK close to the bib but not enough at he end of the run. Drip line allows you to place an emitter next to each shrub or plant without performance loss down the line. You can convert spays with drip "spider" heads. What is your water pressure? Spray heads and drip shouldn't have more then 30psi for optimum performance Look at flat spray heads (they do not provide elevation and are designed to go under the shrub canopy). Move your heads to sit against the foundation and have them shoot out. All you'd need is a shovel and enough funny pipe. Use bublers.
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