I purchased dynoseal safecoat to use for interior sides of pressure treated (pt) raised garden beds. But says should be covered with elastomeric coating. Can I use roofguard for this? Also, can I use both dynoseal and roofguard for the bottoms and side of new pt lumber? Pt lumber is supposed to dry before being treated, but I won't be able to access the sides of the boards in contact with the ground or covered in dirt inside after they are built. Will dynoseal safeguard and roofguard adhere well to new pt lumber?
SAMPLE - AFM SafeCoat, RoofGuard
Roofing
Status:
Open Aug 11, 2020 - 11:53 AM
1answer
Answer
Aug 12, 2020 - 05:01 AM
Hold on. Dynoseal in the context of planters and raised garden beds is absolutely fine on it's own. You do not need to apply other products (like RoofGuard) if the garden bed wood is going underground.With regard to the pressure treatedness. We confirmed with AFM that you should go ahead and apply the DynoSeal to the pressure treated lumber now. It makes sense that you would not want to dig it up later to apply the product.
View More Product Details
Browse by Category
Roofing
View our complete selection of Roofing to find the one that suites your needs.
View All
View all Roofing Questions & Answers
View all SAMPLE - AFM SafeCoat, RoofGuard Questions & Answers