I've got 4 gallons of Peel Stop from when it was still made by Zehrung (how many years ago is that?). I got it by mistake and never bothered sending it back. I never had the guts to try it on anything. I just figured that if there was a peeling problem, this stuff would probably just compound it. Maybe I'll have to give it a try.We've sold a fair bit of it out of the store. Zinsser Peel Stop is the one we stock. Everyone we've had use it says it does an excellent job. I've used it myself with chalking issues. We sell virtually no Emulsa-bond anymore since bringing this in. We've also sold a bit of Xim Peel Bond. It's a good product but extremely expensive. It's not worth using over Peel Stop in my opinion unless you specifically need it filling capabilities. Xim is a lot thicker that Zinsser.
I agree. We use it all the time. We have spot primed with it and we have sprayed it on out to 40 mils. I think it's a great product. You can't build the Zinnser product any more than 4 mils.XIM is a ten times better product than Zinnser's
Real facts about Peel Bond. QUV tests show that Peel Bond with topcoat outlasts oil/alkyd primers by a large margin. Peel Bond breathes unlike Mad Dog which is an elastomeric which can cause moisture entrapment. You can build surface with PB. 30 mils WFT thickness with 1 coat, dries to 9.5 mils. Easily sprayed with 517 tip and 1100-1200 PSI, try that with an elastomeric. Dries in about an hour and does not stay tacky. 5 times thicker than Peel Stop. Can be tinted. Like all of XIM's products it is very aggressive in penetration of bare wood and bonding to surfaces.
Little know fact about Peel Bond is that it has great hold out. Contractors report having to use about 30% less topcoat than with ordinary primers.
Anyone having any technical questions can contact me at [email protected]