Priming Dense Substrates Before Airtight Membranes — Intelligent Membranes

Priming Dense Substrates Before Airtight Membranes

Not every wall is porous — some are too dense or too smooth for a membrane to key into. On those substrates, the right primer is what makes the coating stick and stay stuck.

Priming a dense substrate for bonding

The problem

Dense concrete, power-floated slabs, smooth render and similar surfaces give a membrane very little to grip. Without a key, even a good airtight coating can delaminate under stress or fail to develop full adhesion — a hidden risk in the airtight layer.

The solution: Primer I.M

Primer I.M strengthens and keys dense substrates, giving membranes like Passive Purple a sound surface to bond to. For porous and lime walls, use Lime Prime instead — the two cover the full range of substrates between them.

How it is applied

  • Clean the surface of dust, laitance and contaminants
  • Apply Primer I.M to create a key
  • Apply the membrane once the primer is ready

Benefits

  • Improves adhesion on dense, smooth surfaces
  • Strengthens the substrate
  • A more reliable, longer-lasting membrane

Frequently asked questions

Dense or porous — which primer? Primer I.M for dense/smooth; Lime Prime for porous/lime/dusty.

Do I always need a primer? Not always — but on marginal substrates it’s cheap insurance against adhesion failure.

Read Priming Porous & Lime Substrates for the other half of the picture.

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