I'm sure anybody that has ever washed a house has come across these. I was told they are bug poop. Has anybody found anything that will remove them. I gave up trying years ago after exhausting all efforts, but I figure somebody on here might have solved the puzzle.
I believe your talking about the small black tarry dots that have a little yellow residue?
If so, they are bug poop from catapillers feeding on tree sap/leaves and are a biotch to get off. Being sticky tar like a degreaser would prob work but might need to be scrubbed, auto-parts places sell stuff to get it off your car.
I'm guessing artillery fungus. A few people have mentioned that " magic erasers" work, but I have not had success with using them. They do work, but it's very time consuming. it comes from infested mulch. Each spore needs to be individually scraped.
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Definitely artillery fungus and I have not been able to remove them either.. We see a lot of it here in MD where mulch filled plant beds surround the home.
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we have a ton of it here as well it is on a large majority of homes that use mulch for landscaping. I usually tell and show the customer that this chit just dont come off easilly and if you want me to do it its a 150.00 per hour at a 2 hour minimum. They usually decline.hahaha
Tried goof off, it does not remove the stubborn little buggers. How you can get them off is to take a small soldering gun, using a point tip, go around and burn each one. After you cook them, they fall right off. Of course, you better be charging $$$$ per hour for this.
Penn State is actually doing a study right now to determine what percentage of mushroom compost it will take to discourage the growth of artillery fungus in mulch. It is a real problem getting bigger by the year. At this time, the only 'cure' I have heard that will work it total removal of the wood mulch beds. My home is covered in them thanks to our generous use of landscaping beds so I did not have to trim... Now I spend hours chiseling the buggers off my white service van and have given up on the house, windows, white railing on the decks and even the old white cat-- she can't move fast enough anymore.
They are a real pain. Whoever solves this one gets rich $$$
It mentions in Sunbrite''s add, a 60 min dwell time. That's got to be tough to do on vinyl siding.
I've used laquer thinner to remove artillery fungus from vehicles. Just do a test spot first and make sure it's a base coat / clearcoat finish on the vehicle.
It mentions in Sunbrite''s add, a 60 min dwell time. That's got to be tough to do on vinyl siding. I've used laquer thinner to remove artillery fungus from vehicles. Just do a test spot first and make sure it's a base coat / clearcoat finish on the vehicle.
Wonder i we make some strong-ass roof mix thickened up to molasses and brush it on, wait 15 mins then pressure wash it off would work?, hell SH kills 99.99% of everything! The high dwell time might be enough to penetrate and break down the cellular structure?
thinking for a start
-1cup straight SH 12-15%
-1/4 cup Ammox etc
-a lil hydroxide? TSP or such?
Um, ignore this post, gotta run out to Rutgers...
-- Edited by Maverick Contracting on Sunday 23rd of October 2011 01:38:53 PM