Plastering dilemma .........
Plastering dilemma .........
Author
Discussion

Harpo

Original Poster:

482 posts

206 months

Saturday 5th March 2011
quotequote all
Hi Gents,
this coming week I'm helping out on a friend to sort out her hallway (not the back passage before YOU ask hehe). All the old plaster has been hacked off and the walls coated with a PVA 5:1 mix.
We are putting up plasterboard using spot and dab rather than using a base coat and a top coat for several reasons. One being that the door lintels are wood! I think the house is from the '30's. I have never seen that before. At least there is no sign of woodworm!
I was going to skim the walls after but I may be making work for myself, so I'm looking for opinions here please.
If I use the taper edges of the board touching I guess I could just tape up and sand flat.
Would this be the easiest option?
I have been confused about the corner metal/paper tape for corners. Is it the same for both internal and external?
Virtual beers all round on my account for your help!

Spudler

3,985 posts

220 months

Saturday 5th March 2011
quotequote all
Undertake the dot n dab by all means...but get a spread in to finish, trust me, if this is new to you it will look a shower of st otherwise. For what they cost and can achive in a day is a no brainer.

Pcot

863 posts

206 months

Saturday 5th March 2011
quotequote all
Agree with Spudler. Taping, and sanding is quite a professional job, and can easily look a mess if done by a DIYer.
Getting a plasterer in to skim over your board, is definetly the way to go.

wolf1

3,091 posts

274 months

Saturday 5th March 2011
quotequote all
You'll spend more time making sure the boards are positioned perfectly so that you can fill them without there being a ridge etc. Not to mention the time filling and sanding the joints. Quicker to have the boards skimmed.

CO2000

3,177 posts

233 months

Saturday 5th March 2011
quotequote all
I say go for it if you are pretty good at DIY.

Buy a big tub of Gyproc pre mixed joint filler & decent sanding block (rubber 3M ones are good) Oakey Green sanding paper(fine) some mesh tape & corner tape, probably £40 all in from B&Q. You could even use a wide paint scraper to apply the mix also a 1/3 sheet electric sander will be useful to sand after the 1st & 2nd stages if you have one.

Paint with waterered down emulsion after the 2nd stage to show up imperfections. Shine a 500v halogen light in from the side to see any imperfections.

It will probably take 3 or 4 stages to get it to a really decent finish but if you have the time & she is short of cash & not in a real hurry then it will be well worth it.




davepoth

29,395 posts

223 months

Saturday 5th March 2011
quotequote all
Doing a skim over plasterboard is probably the easiest plastering to do. the trick is to get the mixture just right - too dry or too wet and it's a nightmare, just right and even I could do it.

Harpo

Original Poster:

482 posts

206 months

Saturday 5th March 2011
quotequote all
Thanks guys for the replies.
I can skim to an okay standard. It just seemed like extra work to skim over perfectly good board, except for the join. However, if joining (which I haven't tried)is not that easy then I know what to do! Cheers!

CO2000

3,177 posts

233 months

Sunday 6th March 2011
quotequote all
Harpo said:
Thanks guys for the replies.
I can skim to an okay standard. It just seemed like extra work to skim over perfectly good board, except for the join. However, if joining (which I haven't tried)is not that easy then I know what to do! Cheers!
I think joints only is much easier than a full skim.