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Absorption
Commonly
known as suction rate. The amount of water absorbed when a
dry brick is immersed to a depth of 3mm for a period of one
minute.
Absorption-
water
The
amount of water the brick will absorb when immersed in either
cold or boiling water for a specific length of lime. It is
expressed as a percentage of weight of the dry brick.
Additives
A broad term that encompasses all of the ingredients,
added to an emulsion to impart certain properties that improve
the performance or properties of this emulsion.
Anchor
See also TIE. A piece or connected pieces of metal used to
attach building parts such as plates or joists to masonry
materials. Also describes the attachment of masonry to the
building structure.
Arch
A structural space used to span openings
or recesses. Structurally, an arch is a component or assembly
of components arranged over an opening so that the supported
load is resolved into pressures on the side supports.
Auto ignition
The temperature at atmospheric pressure that the vapor will
ignite spontaneously.
Average porosity masonry
Masonry with cold water absorption of approximately 6-10%
Bagged Brickwork
A rough method of finishing brickwork. Usually
used in preparation for a painted finish by applying thin,
sloppy mortar with a hessian bag or similar material.
Bat
A piece of cut or broken brick; also known
as half brick.
Boiling
Range
A
range of temperatures that mark the onset of boiling.
Bone
Tying the various parts of a brick wall by
lapping one brick over another. The adhesion of the mortar
to the bricks is also referred to as the Bond. The term Bond
is also used to describe the various patterns formed by the
exposed faces of the bricks.
Colonial Bond: Three courses of STRETCHERS
followed by one course of HEADERS.
English Bond: Alternate stretcher and header
courses.
Flemish Bond: Alternate stretchers and headers
in each course.
Garden Wall Bond: Three stretchers to one header
in each course.
Slack Bond: Stretchers laid above the other with
perpendiculars in line.
Stretcher Bond: All stretchers, except where the
header is needed to complete a course. Also called a Half
Bond.
Breathing
In this regard it means allowing air and water vapor carried
in air to pass through its pores.
Brick
A solid or perforated unit of clay formed
into a rectangular prism and hardened by a firing process.
The size of the brick is limited by the following:
Its length shall not be less than 1.5 times its width, and
not more then 390mm.
I It's height shall not be greater than 60% of its length.
These provisions do not apply to bricks cut or purpose-made
to complete a bond.
Air Brick: Terracotta or similar fired clay
brick built info walls to allow circulation of air through
walls.
Base Course Bricks: A brick with one edge
bevel led allowing a neat reduction in wall thickness.
Clinker Brick: A hard, bloated and sometimes
distorted looking brick. This is caused by the brick being
burnt almost to the point of complete vitrification.
Common Brick: Any brick not treated for special
texture or color variations, and made primarily for the purpose
of building. Also used to describe reject facing bricks used
in non visible part of a wall.
Dough-Boy (or callow): An unfired clay brick.
Extruded Brick: Made by forcing a continuous
column of clay with an 14 -25% moisture content through a
die. The clay is then wire cut to the required length.
Fire Brick: Made from refractory ceramic
material which is able to withstand high temperatures.
Facing Brick: Made primarily for use in facing
walls.The bricks used in the Austral Mediterranean Collection
are facing bricks.
Hard-Fired/Burned: A term specific to high
temperature fired bricks. This produces low water absorption
and nigh compressive strength.
Brick on Edge Construction
A wall constructed where traditional size
bricks are laid on their narrow edge, normally with the visible
face rendered.
Bricky's sand
Sand used for making mortar. Contains a high
proportion of clay that acts as an mortar plasticising agent
.
Brick veneer
Construction where the load-bearing structure
is made of steel or timber frames rather than brick. A single
leaf of brickwork is used for the exposed exterior of the
building. The non-structural brickwork is tied to the building.
Buttering
The act of placing mortar on the full head
of the brick before ifs laid.
Caulked
A flexible caulking that is inserted over the expansion gap
and expansion joint to keep weather and insects out.
Chock
A piece of brick used to fill a small hole.
Closer
A less that full-size brick used to bring
a wall to a vertical face.
Bevelled Closer: A brick cut so as to have
one end half the normal dimension and full width the other
end.
King Closer: A brick with one comer cut off
between the mid-points of adjacent sides.
Queen Closer: A brick which has been cut
half longitudinally.
Coping
The material or bricks used to form a finish
or cap on top of a wall. This will protect the brickwork below
from water penetration above.
Course
One of the continuous horizontal layers of
bricks which are bonded with mortar to form the brickwork
structure.
Dags
Lumps of hardened mortar left on the brick face by untidy
bricklaying.
Damp Course
A layer or course of impervious material in a floor or wall
to prevent the downward and upward movement of moisture.
Decorative
contrast band
A band or course or several courses of brickwork that is colored
in a contrasting color to that of the main brickwork for aesthetic
reasons.
Efflorescence
the salty residue deposited or appearing on the surface of
masonry. It can be due to a number of soluble salts moving
from wet masonry to its dry surface. The salts can be from
the brickwork or from the environment surrounding the brickwork
eg fertilizer from garden beds etc.
Expansion joint
a compressible expanded rubber or polymer membrane inserted
between panels of brickwork to allow for brick expansion and
thermal expansion of the brick wall
Face
The long surface of an exposed brick, or the exposed surface
of a wall.
Flash
Point
The temperature at which the vapor of a liquid compound will
ignite, at atmospheric pressure, when exposed to a naked flame.
Footing
A specific part of a structure designed to
transfer loads to the foundation.
Foundation
The earth-supported structural elements.
Full flush joint
The full flush joint is a full bed of mortar (grout) approximately
10mm in thickness that is cut off flush and level with the
edges of the brick. This joint is a standard finish for face
quality brickwork.
Grout
In
un reinforced brickwork - mortar of a consistency such that
it will flow without segregating the materials to be joined.
In reinforced brickwork -a specially made material, like concrete,
that will flow without segregation.
Hacking
Scarring the face of a brick surface to provide a hold for
an applied finish such as plaster.
Header
A brick laid with its greatest dimension perpendicular
to the face of the wall.
Header course
A continuous bonding course of header bricks.
Heritage
Buildings or dwellings of historic significance and usually
protected by local councils to preserve the historic appearance
of such buildings.
Infill
An infill is a contrasting panel of brickwork in a wall that
is either laid with different laying bond or mortar finish
or different colored bricks for aesthetic reasons.
Joints
Flush Joint: The mortar is scraped off flush
with the brick face. This is always used when a smooth finish
is required. This is the joint used for the Austral Bricks
Mediterranean Collection
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| Flush
Joint Gray Mortar |
Raked
Joint: The mortar is raked off about 8mm back from
the face of the brick.
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| Raked
Joint White Mortar |
Rolled
Joint: A round, iron bar is drawn across the wet
mortar, smoothing the finish and creating a half-circle indent.
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| Rolled
Joint Cream Mortar |
Struck
Joint: A trowel is used to remove the mortar at a
slight angle to the face of the brick.
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| Struck
Joint Off-white Mortar |
Leach
the action of water soluble impurities such as salts that will
be carried by water through a porous structure. Moving through
the porous structure and then depositing on the other side or
the dry side of this structure when the water carrying the salt
evaporates.
Lintel
A beam of various materials, including reinforced brickwork,
placed over the opening in a wall to carry the superimposed
weight above.
Masonry
The broad term that encompasses a masonry unit being constructed
into walls using a mortar to build the walls. Masonry units
include but are not limited to clay brick, clay block, concrete
brick, concrete block, sandstone, granite, limestone, manufactured
stone etc.
Mottle
A mixture of different shades of a color A mottle occurs naturally
during the firing process of clay bricks, especially in older
kilns. A bricklayer can also give a house or building an even
look by mottling the bricks prior to laying
Mordants
Serving
to fix colors in dyeing, a reagent, such as tannic acid, that
fixes dyes to cells, tissues, or textiles or other materials
Mortar
Grout or binding cement for brickwork laid in beds between bricks
and in perps between brick ends.
Mortar joint
The grout between the bricks once they are laid. It is usually
formulated with mixture between white Portland cement and a
light bricklayers sand graded and blended to be suitable for
use in bricklaying. The mortar joint is designed to be off white
or light cream prior to Colorbrik Application.
Pore structures the array of small, (microscopic in size), interconnected
and terminating cavities within the surface of bricks, mortar
and other masonry items. These microscopic pores are flooded
with the tinting emulsion during the Colorbrik application.
Neutralizing
compounds
Compounds with a high alkalinity that when applied to masonry
surface that have been treated with acids etc will neutralize
the masonry. Bring its pH back to approximately pH 7-8
Permanent brickwork color tinting
The re-coloring of masonry surfaces such as brickwork. This
permanent tinting is effected by application of a permanent
masonry stain over clean dry masonry. The dry masonry absorbs
the stain into its surface pore structures whereby the binders
in the stain bond the colorants which are oxides to the walls
of these pores. The result is a final color change to the
surface of the masonry whilst its natural texture and authentic
brick and mortar look are retained.
QUV
A standard accelerated weatherometer testing apparatus that
is designed to assess and rank the durability of a surface
coating or finish with regards to UV radiation.
Resin solids
the dry weight of the resin in the emulsion of the Colorbrik.
Rundown
When spraying on water repellent emulsions this is the amount
of distance the liquid excess runs down the wall below the
area being sprayed.
Run of kiln
Burned clay bricks from one kiln which have not been sorted
or graded.
Salt Attack /Damp
The fretting of brickwork caused by the drying out on the
surface of salts dissolved in the water that is wetting the
brickwork.
Sharp
the term used for sand that contains little or no naturally
occurring clays or silts. Such sands are usually obtained
from quarrying operations on beaches and dunes or on river
beds or former river beds. Sharp sands are not suitable for
use in mortars used with Colorbrik applications by themselves
without modifications to the mortar mix.
Soldier
A brick laid on ifs edge so that its greatest
dimension is vertical.
Spec built
This is a dwelling or building constructed by the builder
or developer for the purpose of sale.
Stable
oxides
Oxides used in coloration rather than dyes and synthesized
colorants. These oxides are stable.
Stain
A
liquid substance applied especially to brick that penetrates
the surface and imparts a rich color. Painting and Staining.
These denote two different processes; the first mechanical,
the other chiefly chemical. To paint a thing is to spread
a coat of coloring matter over it and hide its surface; to
stain a thing is to impart color to its substance. To stain
is said chiefly of solids, as wood, glass, brick, paper; the
first commonly, a simple process, as applying a wash; the
other more complex, as fixing colors by mordants.
Staggered Wall
A wait incorporating alternating left-hand and right-hand
returns. This is often used to increase a wall's stability.
Stretcher
A brick with its greatest dimension parallel to the lace of
the wall.
String Course
A horizontal, narrow course of brickwork, after mould ed and
slightly projected from the rest of the wall
Substrate
The masonry surface whether it be brick ,block, mortar etc.
Tie
-wall
Metal
used lo attach two leaves of a cavity wall together or to
attach the single masonry leaf of brick-veneer construction
to its supporting frame.
Tuckpointing
Where the mortar projects as a fine edge between the bricks.
The joints are raked and joined with mortar, and are usually
colored to match the bricks, A shallow groove approximately
8mm wide is formed in the joints and the grooves are filled
contrasting color projecting 2 to 3mm.
Walls
Base Wall: That portion of the wall below
the level of the adjacent grade or below the structure of
the floor.
Bearing Wall: A wall which supports a substantially
vertical load in addition to its own weight.
Cavity Wall: A brick wall built so as to
provide a continuous air space at least 25mm wide, and rarely
more than 110mm wide within the wall. The facing and backing
are tied together with metal ties.
Dwarf Wall: A wall or partition which does
not meet the ceiling.
Exterior Wall: Any outside wall or vertical
enclosure.
Spandrel Wall: That part of a wall above
a window in one story, and below the sill of a window in the
story above.
Weathering
A sloping surface arranged to throw rainwater clear of the
face of lower brickwork.
Weepholes
these are intermittent spaced vacant perp end joints (gaps
between bricks laid side by side where by mortar was deliberately
left off the brick during laying.) These gaps allow water
to drain out of the wall cavity at floor level if water inadvertently
were to enter the cavity between the brick wall and the internal
wall.
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