Is this normal for an outdoor roof?
Is this normal for an outdoor roof?
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Discussion

UTH

Original Poster:

11,230 posts

198 months

Thursday 27th November
quotequote all
This is the inside of a couple of patches of the roof of the outdoor kitchen......is this normal as obviously it's outside, or despite that should this not be appearing?




Rough101

2,876 posts

95 months

Thursday 27th November
quotequote all
It’s mould, my shed gets like that if I don’t bleach it, but odd that it’s happening in an undercover area with the wind blowing through it though

UTH

Original Poster:

11,230 posts

198 months

Thursday 27th November
quotequote all
Rough101 said:
It s mould, my shed gets like that if I don t bleach it, but odd that it s happening in an undercover area with the wind blowing through it though
Ok I did think it would be mould of some sort.
Anything to worry about? Basically I'm hoping it's not a sign the felting of the roof has been done badly? Should I be doing anything about it?

phazed

22,379 posts

224 months

Thursday 27th November
quotequote all
Could also be that the ply was contaminated in that area with some sort of dirt. That will attract moisture and lead to condensation.

Strange construction with that trellis detail. Photo from the outside?

UTH

Original Poster:

11,230 posts

198 months

Thursday 27th November
quotequote all
phazed said:
Could also be that the ply was contaminated in that area with some sort of dirt. That will attract moisture and lead to condensation.

Strange construction with that trellis detail. Photo from the outside?

paulwirral

3,699 posts

155 months

Thursday 27th November
quotequote all
Underneath the cooking facilities by chance ?

UTH

Original Poster:

11,230 posts

198 months

Thursday 27th November
quotequote all
paulwirral said:
Underneath the cooking facilities by chance ?
Yep, the worst patch is absolutely.


paulwirral

3,699 posts

155 months

Thursday 27th November
quotequote all
UTH said:
Yep, the worst patch is absolutely.

I’ll correct myself , above the cooking area !
I wouldn’t worry about it , bleach it off if your fussy , mine looks a bit scruffy above the bbq so one day I’ll fashion a chimney to divert the smoke out

Tisy

1,175 posts

12 months

Thursday 27th November
quotequote all
That's the moisture/steam from the stuff you're cooking collecting on the wood and then producing mould. Move the cooking thing outside out of structure or give it a hood and a flue and divert it elsewhere, or put a hole through the roof with a couple of foot of chimney out the top. Mould problem sorted.

UTH

Original Poster:

11,230 posts

198 months

Friday 28th November
quotequote all
Tisy said:
That's the moisture/steam from the stuff you're cooking collecting on the wood and then producing mould. Move the cooking thing outside out of structure or give it a hood and a flue and divert it elsewhere, or put a hole through the roof with a couple of foot of chimney out the top. Mould problem sorted.
Hmmmm, not convinced any of those is realistically an option.
I thought it was very common place for people with big green eggs and outdoor kitchens to have a setup like this...... frown

Snow and Rocks

2,987 posts

47 months

Friday 28th November
quotequote all
I'm not a great fan of "man made" materials like ply or mdf at the best of times especially in outdoor environments, they never seem to age very well but this stuff is pretty good at dealing with any organic growth on external surfaces.

I believe it's the same stuff that's in Patio Magic that you see in normal DIY stores. This is just obviously much cheaper as you dilute it yourself. Be careful and use appropriate PPE as it's pretty strong stuff.

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Benzalkonium-Concentrated...

UTH

Original Poster:

11,230 posts

198 months

Friday 28th November
quotequote all
Snow and Rocks said:
I'm not a great fan of "man made" materials like ply or mdf at the best of times especially in outdoor environments, they never seem to age very well but this stuff is pretty good at dealing with any organic growth on external surfaces.

I believe it's the same stuff that's in Patio Magic that you see in normal DIY stores. This is just obviously much cheaper as you dilute it yourself. Be careful and use appropriate PPE as it's pretty strong stuff.

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Benzalkonium-Concentrated...
Ahhh thank you, guessing I just need a spray bottle type thing and spray a mist onto the affected area?

Snow and Rocks

2,987 posts

47 months

Saturday 29th November
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Yep, just spray or brush it on and leave it. Takes a while but generally works pretty well.

Buying the premixed patio magic might make sense for such a small area.

Like I said, be careful it's quite strong stuff.

UTH

Original Poster:

11,230 posts

198 months

Saturday 29th November
quotequote all
Snow and Rocks said:
Yep, just spray or brush it on and leave it. Takes a while but generally works pretty well.

Buying the premixed patio magic might make sense for such a small area.

Like I said, be careful it's quite strong stuff.
Ok thanks, good to know I have options if I can't stand the sight of it