Can you do tuckpointing yourself?

While homeowners can tackle tuckpointing as a do-it-yourself project, they should consider leaving it to a professional. The labor-intensive method requires extreme precision to create the illusion of level mortar joints.

What tools do you need for tuckpointing?

The are some very basic but helpful tools you will want to have on hand if you decide to do the tuckpointing yourself – such as a mortar trowel, tuckpointing grinder, a plugging chisel and hammer, a mortar gun and some masonry brushes. Trowels are used to spread the mortar when tuckpointing block, brick or stone.

What type of mortar is used for repointing?

Type O mortar, or high-lime mortar, a softer mortar with a low compressive strength of 350 psi, is best suited to repointing for several reasons. The first reason is that type O mortar is softer than the older bricks, and it allows the bricks to expand or contract from temperature changes or stress.

What is the correct mix for repointing?

A typical mortar mix for Repointing purposes, for use in an area subject to normal weather conditions, would comprise 1 part Portland Cement, 1 part Lime and 5½ parts Sand.

Is masonry cement the same as mortar?

Masonry cement is mixed with sand and water to produce mortar for brick, block and stone construction. Mortar is the bonding agent that forms individual masonry units into a wall. Other applications include stucco and cement-based plasters.

How difficult is tuckpointing?

Tuckpointing isn’t difficult or expensive—the only real investment is your time. But you can pick away at it in your free time, area by area. The steps we show here will work on any brick walls, chimneys and retaining walls.

How long does it take to Tuckpoint?

Tuckpointing a 20 sq. ft. area of chimney wall can cost $200 and take around four hours for one mason. Labour makes 50% or more of the total tuckpointing cost involved.