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4 Comments on NEVER Pressure Wash A Deck!
Jason, thanks for the tip of pressure washing decks. Will pass on to clients.
I agree - I just made this mistake!
To say "Never pressure wash your deck" probably is not the best advice. Pressure washing has its place, but as with home inspectors and Realtors, the best thing for someone to do is to check the references, education, experience, and years in business of the person or company doing the pressure washing.
Each material to be pressure washed - stucco, concrete, redwood, pine, oak, concrete, asphalt, etc. - has its own pressure that should be used. For some woods, not all woods, the problems described in Jay's post are inherent to the wood and how the wood was cut. Additionally, by the time the deck "needs to be" pressure washed, many of the problems described by Jay are there already due to lack of simple maintenance.
When my husband was doing research at the forest products laboratory at Texas A&M University many decades ago, one of their studies was for the Southern Yellow Pine consortium of lumber companies in the South. The purpose was to determine the optimum water content of the Southern Yellow Pine species (loblolly, slash, shortleaf, and longleaf) for holding, shipping, and destination arrival to help minimize cracks, splits, twisting, and warping. Much of it is dependent on the wood cut (flat, rift, quarter, rotary, etc.) but for that shown in the picture, pressure washing followed by planing can do a great job of restoring it. Of course, when he was building and renovating decks, he would have gone back a year later to "finish" the work once the water content of the pine had stabilized and the cracks and splits had manifested themselves.
Jason, sweet, one more chore off my list