kumdoalan;1947764; said:at this point, I wish there was some type of bonding agent that you could put on the walls before you replaster.
From the photos it sure looks like you are banging off and replastering most all of the wall along that side, if thats the case then this is just like many swimming pools that also have to be replastered after their first attempt at plastering fails.
The plaster must have swelled up right?
Perhaps because the plaster "brown" coat sucked in water and expanded ?
If the 2nd attempt also fails to bond-
I dont own a pond or swimming pool, but it seems to me that if I needed to fix a problem like this in my own pond or pool I would try to get the first plaster 'scratch" coat to hang on the walls as best I could.
From what i have been reading about fixing pools with this same common problem the first scratch coat is key to getting the plaster to stay stuck to the under layer of blocks.
Perhaps I would nail or screw on some type of metal mesh to the walls so that the scratch coat of plaster has something to hang on to.
http://www.metal-mesh.org/expandedwiremesh/expanded-metal/wall-plaster-mesh.html
or as in-
http://www.bobvila.com/HowTo_Librar...h_Three_Coat_Plaster-Plaster_Walls-A1921.html
But, in the end, if nothing works you always have the idea to call in a guy who does roofs and he could water proof the whole thing with a hot tar liner of some form or another...
Yes, the plaster must not have been waterproof and as the plaster sucked in water from the pond it swelled up and popped free of the wall.AW7020;1947795; said:one of the other suggestion was to use the epoxy sealer type of finish common in our area for use on factory floors. .
The Amazonian;1947821; said:Amazing Project!!!
kumdoalan;1947814; said:Yes, the plaster must not have been waterproof and as the plaster sucked in water from the pond it swelled up and popped free of the wall.
I see the point of adding a waterproofing coating on top of the plaster.
If this second attempt fails, or if you do decide to go with the epoxy you might check to make sure the stuff can be used on a wall.
Some floor epoxy are "self-leveling" and Im not sure they would work at all on a wall.
see - http://www.epoxy.com/1004.htm
bmxer4ever;1947928; said:Just read the whole thread from start to finish - great project!
Sorry to see your having problems with the final coat - I'm sure you'll find a solution. Always annoying when you get so close to completion only to take it apart again!
Good luck with it.
G
kumdoalan;1948423; said:I have been doing GOOGLE searches about the way to plaster a pond and I have seen on some ponds that they fill the pond with water the very same day they plaster it!
http://www.koiphen.com/forums/showthread.php?t=29792&page=8
In the pond of my link they actually filled the pond up with water just 6 hours after plastering the pond.
Also in that pond they had just one leak after another and there were big issues with the plastering that caused the whole bottom' plaster to be hammered off and re-plastered.(sorta like with your pond's walls)
So from what i have been learing , needing to hammer off the plaster of a pond is nothing new and is just something that can happen to any guy's pond.
I read about this problem on other sites and it seems very important with some pond type plaster that it be kept wet, even kept underwater so that it cures in a correct manner.
I also learned about bonding new plaster to the older stuff, and there are some products that they use to help with a good bond.