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Float coat (cement render)

Float coat is the second of three coats in a cement render system: 6-10 mm thick, floated to a true plane, keys for the finish coat. Also called the brown coat.

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A float coat is the second (middle) coat of a three-coat cement render system. It sits between the scratch coat (first coat, keys to the substrate) and the finish coat (third coat, the visible surface). The float coat is typically 6-10 mm thick and is screeded to a true plane using a long aluminium or timber rule, then floated with a wooden or sponge float to close the face and create a key for the finish coat. The float coat is also called the brown coat in some traditions.

Position in the three-coat system:

CoatThicknessPurpose
Scratch (first)4-8 mmBonds to substrate (block, brick, fibre cement), scratched horizontally to key the next coat
Float (second)6-10 mmBrings the surface to a true plane; floated to close the face and key for finish
Finish (third)2-5 mmDecorative surface; trowelled smooth, textured, or float-finished

Total system thickness: 12-23 mm.

Float coat procedure:

  1. Wait for scratch coat to set (typically 1-3 days; light surface dryness, still damp inside).
  2. Mist the scratch coat before applying float to reduce suction.
  3. Apply the float coat using hawk and trowel; build up to required thickness.
  4. Screed off with a long straight edge to bring to a true plane.
  5. Float with wooden or sponge float to close the surface and create the key.
  6. Cut horizontal scratch lines lightly with a scarifier or comb (1-2 mm deep) to provide key for finish coat.
  7. Cure under cover and damp conditions (typically 2-3 days before finish coat).

Why the float coat matters:

  • Trueness of plane: this coat sets the final wall plane that the finish coat will follow.
  • Key for finish coat: the floated surface bonds the finish coat; smooth or polished surface fails to bond.
  • Strength of the system: thickness here gives the system its mechanical strength.
  • Crack control: thinner float coats are more prone to crazing; thicker (6-10 mm) within recommended range.

Material mix (typical for residential cement render float coat):

ComponentRatio (by volume)
Cement1
Lime (hydrated builders lime)1-2
Sand (washed plastering grade)5-7
WaterTo workability

Some renderers add plasticisers or fibre admixtures. Polymer-modified renders (e.g. Rockcote, Dulux Acratex) come premixed.

Common builder issues:

  • Skipping the float coat (two-coat system instead of three): saves time but loses thickness and crack control.
  • Float too thin (<5 mm): more prone to crazing.
  • Float too thick (>12 mm): prone to slumping during application; surface drying issues.
  • Smooth-trowelled float (no key): finish coat doesn’t bond.
  • Insufficient cure time: finish coat applied too soon; bonding issues, drying shrinkage transfer.
  • Wrong sand grade: render too rich or too lean; cracking.

For builders:

  1. Spec a three-coat render system for any structural masonry or block external rendering: don’t accept two-coat where AS 3700 expects three.
  2. Confirm the renderer keys the float coat with light horizontal scratches: a smooth-trowelled float coat will lose the finish coat.
  3. Allow proper cure time between coats: 2-3 days minimum per coat in normal conditions.
  4. Photograph each coat during application: useful for warranty claims if cracking emerges later.
  5. Don’t render in direct sun or wind: rapid drying causes crazing; render in shaded conditions or with sun shading.

Also known as: brown coat, second coat render, middle coat render.

Category: Render / plastering / finishes.

See also


Last updated: 2026-05-16. Verified: 2026-05-16.