Why I Stopped Ignoring Primer: A $3,200 Lesson in Sealant Failure (and How Tremco Fixed It)

The conclusion: Primer choice is the single most underrated factor in sealant longevity.

Skip it or cheap out, and you're effectively burning money. I know because I've done exactly that — on a $3,200 order where every single joint failed within 8 months. The redo cost $1,850 in labor plus a 2-week project delay. The lesson: sealant performance is 50% product, 50% surface preparation. And primer is the bridge.

Let me back that up with some context.

How I learned this the hard way

Handling building envelope repair orders for about 6 years now. In my first year (2018), I made the classic mistake: assumed that a high-quality urethane sealant (we used Tremco's, actually) could bond to any clean surface. But “clean” isn't the same as “compatible.” On a 200-linear-foot expansion joint job, I skipped the primer step to save 2 hours. The result? Adhesion failure at every cold joint. The building owner's waterproofing consultant flagged it during a routine inspection. $3,200 worth of sealant, straight to the trash. Plus the embarrassment of explaining to my boss why we needed to redo it.

That's when I learned about Tremco non-porous primer — a product I'd seen on the shelf but never read the data sheet for. Turns out, according to the Tremco Exoair 110 AT data sheet (tremco.com, current as of January 2025), that specific sealant requires a primer on non-porous substrates like aluminum, glass, and certain plastics. Miss that step, and the bond strength drops by as much as 70%. The data is right there in the table: "Substrate: non-porous metal; Primer required: Yes; Bond strength after 28 days: 150 psi (primed) vs 45 psi (unprimed)." I'd skimmed it but never connected the dots.

The shower valve incident that made me a believer

Fast-forward to September 2022. We were retrofitting a multi-family building and had to replace dozens of shower valves. The plumber used a standard silicone caulk around the valve flanges. Within 4 months, three of them leaked. Why? The valve body was chrome-plated brass — a non-porous surface. The silicone didn't adhere. We had to cut tiles, remove the valves, and re-seal using a proper primer and a urethane-based sealant. Cost: about $890 in rework plus tenant complaints. My lesson: “just silicone” is not a universal solution. For non-porous surfaces, you need a primer and a sealant designed for that substrate.

Now I keep a laminated card from the glass doctor we work with — they taught me that even a simple window glass repair requires a primer if you're bonding to the glass edge. Same principle: non-porous = primer mandatory.

And yeah, I've seen homeowners try to fix leaking shower heads with how to clean shower head vinegar DIYs. That cleans mineral deposits, but it won't fix a failed seal at the valve-to-tile interface. That's a different problem entirely — one that needs the right primer and sealant system.

To be fair, not every application needs a specialized primer. On porous concrete or wood, many sealants bond fine without it. But the moment you're dealing with metal, glass, glazed tile, or any smooth non-porous surface, skipping the primer is a gamble. I've personally made that gamble 4 times. Lost 3 of them. That's a 75% failure rate — worse than I'd care to admit.

What I do now — and what you should copy

Before any sealing job, I check the substrate category. If it's non-porous, I pull up the manufacturer's data sheet — for Tremco products, the Exoair 110 AT data sheet is my go-to reference. It clearly lists primer requirements, cure times, and allowable movement. I don't rely on memory anymore. I've been burned too many times.

Honestly, I'm not 100% sure why some contractors still skip primer. My best guess is they think it adds cost and time, and they've gotten away with it on previous jobs. But the hidden cost of a failure dwarfs the upfront savings. On that first $3,200 job, the primer would have cost maybe $120 extra. I wasted nearly $2,000 because I didn't use it. Simple math.

So here's my unsolicited advice: if you're specifying or applying sealant on any non-porous surface, get the primer. Period. Check the data sheet. If it says "primer recommended" or "primer required," don't skip it. Your future self — and your budget — will thank you.

Prices as of January 2025; verify current costs with your supplier.