Oh my I just wanted to let you know that you're an amazing person in REALLY EXPLAINING all work that you do and show to everyone watching your videos. Thank you.
Great tutorial. Good to see overlapping similarities and slight differences between my technique and yours. No matter how long I've been doing this I always check out how other pros do it. Adds to the arsenal of applications.
My current project is renovating used and abandoned mobile homes; i.e. trailers. I'm studying the best way to repair drywall in trailers. But i hear that drywall in trailers is different than ordinary homes. But none the less, I'm deeply impressed with your technique and skill. I will look into this further.
you all probably dont give a damn but does anybody know a method to get back into an Instagram account? I somehow lost the password. I love any tricks you can offer me!
@Kristian Silas i really appreciate your reply. I got to the site on google and im waiting for the hacking stuff atm. Looks like it's gonna take quite some time so I will get back to you later when my account password hopefully is recovered.
Yup! I only recently discovered the powdered setting mud in the past few years, for some reason it's not too popular here in NY. Amazing stuff!!! In addition to drying fast, it doesn't shrink!! You can fill big voids with thick mud in one shot, then a thin coat of EZ sand bucket stuff to finish.
I have a new appreciation for plasterers after removing some tiles in my kitchen. Patching up the holes in the plaster has been such a pain. It might look flat but if I shine a light across that surface and it'll look *really* bad
Like all of your videos, this is extremely helpful and informative. Even with things I’m familiar with, I always get something out of your presentations.
Just found this video and it was EXPERTLY explained and demo-ed! As a novice, I found this explanation to be super helpful. I appreciate this so much. Thank you and a hearty hello from the great Pacific Northwest, Lakewood, Washington! 💛🖤💛 Stacy's Artful Heart
Enjoyed the video Ethan. That was interesting and I learned something new. Thanks for taking the time to produce the video. Y'all stay well and God bless.
I saw another vid on patching and mixing 45 min mud, he said you got to mix it make sure you get all the lumps out. What's the deal as It looks like there were plenty of lumps in his mix. Yes I look at his results that are perfect but all us DIY patcher are not as skilled with the knife as him.
To join existing drywall joint that has metal flashing behind it - do I need to chip out the compound a little when joining to new construction. This case, lower a closet door opening for new barn door type.
Hi Ethan, thanks for the video! I am working on a tiny home that has wood paneling. I was going to use joint compound for the joints but am now thinking it will too easily crack. I was looking at your Bondo video and considered that a better alternative but wanted to know if you thought it would work or if you could recommend another product more flexible
Are joints Tounge and grove? Are trying make wall look flat or just want fill in gaps? What about None shrinking wood fillers or an Good Painter's Caulk.
1) is this the same exact thing you would do on drywall with the same product? 2) in the end you mentioned bucket mod being different from this, what's the difference?
Bucket mud is easier to sand, last for month if not years in the bucket, so you aren't throwing away the unused portions, it doesn't ruin your tools if you let it dry on them, and is much easier to use for beginners. You really don't want to use 5, 20, 45, or 90 minute mud on your final coat. It's too hard, it's hard to sand and doesn't take paint as well. Stick to the bucket unless you have 1/4 inch or deeper gaps to fill.
Minimal dust left by either a dustless Porter Cable sander or hand sanding. Been doing this work for almost 40 years and no need to dust the wall after sanding and before priming.
I've used one for the past 15 years and never had an issue or a call back. I think it could depend on the mud you are using and if its prone to not have much glue in it
@@A.S.P.R. Yeah the powdered compound or real plaster needs water and time to rehydrate. Once the mud has set, it can be dried out quickly. But remove the water prior to hydration and the gypsum or lime does not crystalize properly. Once the mud has set, it can be dried out quickly. We have been doing plasters, mostly with integral color, for around 40 years.
Wish I didnt just see this video. Guess I wasted my money on a bucket of mud. I wont buy one ever again. I'll follow your video. Thanks for the information.
Lol,. This guy is full of shit. Bucket mud is perfect for beginners. Actual Drywall crews use bucket mud exclusively.. once your good enough with bucket mud you'll know when to use hot mud.
Bucket mud is good it just takes longer to dry and if you were skim coating walls ( making them smooth) I recommend the bucket it has a glue in it and sands easier. You could use powder for First coats and then use bucket for finish coat.
Yes. If its hot mud its usually dry at 4 to 5 times what the bag says which is working time. If its humid it might take longer. Hot and arid is faster. Put a fan on it to increase timing in any condition.
If you'd like to be productive instead of wasting time with a very slow heat gun on a fairly large area, get a fan gently blowing across the wall and go do something else for a little while.
You can get all the information that guy is selling, on youtube for free. From what I've seen here, you are better off with the free content, this place excluded.
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Oh my I just wanted to let you know that you're an amazing person in REALLY EXPLAINING all work that you do and show to everyone watching your videos. Thank you.
I totally agree!
Great tutorial. Good to see overlapping similarities and slight differences between my technique and yours. No matter how long I've been doing this I always check out how other pros do it. Adds to the arsenal of applications.
Thanks Sean! Philip is great to film-he’ll fly through a wall like this. Wish I had your plastering skills!
My current project is renovating used and abandoned mobile homes; i.e. trailers. I'm studying the best way to repair drywall in trailers. But i hear that drywall in trailers is different than ordinary homes. But none the less, I'm deeply impressed with your technique and skill. I will look into this further.
I love being independent on small easy projects. You both are so articulate and love your precision in your work. Great guys to follow!
you all probably dont give a damn but does anybody know a method to get back into an Instagram account?
I somehow lost the password. I love any tricks you can offer me!
@Donald Kendall Instablaster =)
@Kristian Silas i really appreciate your reply. I got to the site on google and im waiting for the hacking stuff atm.
Looks like it's gonna take quite some time so I will get back to you later when my account password hopefully is recovered.
@Kristian Silas it worked and I actually got access to my account again. I'm so happy!
Thanks so much you saved my ass!
@Donald Kendall glad I could help :)
Yup! I only recently discovered the powdered setting mud in the past few years, for some reason it's not too popular here in NY. Amazing stuff!!! In addition to drying fast, it doesn't shrink!! You can fill big voids with thick mud in one shot, then a thin coat of EZ sand bucket stuff to finish.
I have a new appreciation for plasterers after removing some tiles in my kitchen. Patching up the holes in the plaster has been such a pain. It might look flat but if I shine a light across that surface and it'll look *really* bad
Like all of your videos, this is extremely helpful and informative. Even with things I’m familiar with, I always get something out of your presentations.
Just found this video and it was EXPERTLY explained and demo-ed! As a novice, I found this explanation to be super helpful. I appreciate this so much. Thank you and a hearty hello from the great Pacific Northwest, Lakewood, Washington! 💛🖤💛 Stacy's Artful Heart
Phil is awesome with his technique
Enjoyed the video Ethan. That was interesting and I learned something new. Thanks for taking the time to produce the video. Y'all stay well and God bless.
Thank you Ron!
Total time from mix to sand for a small repair approx. 20 min. (using 5 min. and a heat gun).
...This was awesome! Thank you for your generosity!
Great video and information. Actually learned something new. Thanks.
Thanks so much bro keep up the good work
Really really needed this so much. Thank you.😊
Pros doesn’t use the term “plaster” for drywall mud. It’s either drywall mud or Venetian plaster or acrylic plaster. All very different things.
Why did he change over to the 45 minute compound from the 5 minute?
Great video! Thank you!
I saw another vid on patching and mixing 45 min mud, he said you got to mix it make sure you get all the lumps out. What's the deal as It looks like there were plenty of lumps in his mix. Yes I look at his results that are perfect but all us DIY patcher are not as skilled with the knife as him.
And all of us DIY patchers don’t have dry guns..
Super easy to follow. Thanks!
You’re welcome, Leah, thanks for watching! 🙂
Thanks for the refresher!
Subscribed.
Wow that was the exactly what I needed!
Good to hear, Pernell! 🙂
Great tutorial, thanks!!
great video!
great video
I enjoyed watching this
I like your channel
My old painted woodwork is covered in places with painted-over chips. Any pro techniques for fixing them?
Why do you need two coats? The first looks like it covered everything. Does it shrink?
To join existing drywall joint that has metal flashing behind it - do I need to chip out the compound a little when joining to new construction. This case, lower a closet door opening for new barn door type.
What are you doing wrong when it looks like you've done a perfect mud job; but as soon as you hit with primer, it comes off on your roller?
Bad adhesion, substrate was shiny, oily, dusty, chemically incompatible, too porous; some or all of the above.
...I've heard that's why they add watered down wood/carpenters glue into the water before adding drywall powder.
Also, they paint it onto the wall
You are mudding over plaster that is not bonded to the surface below it. Improper prep before mudding.
Can you apply the same technique with cracks?
Hi Ethan, thanks for the video! I am working on a tiny home that has wood paneling. I was going to use joint compound for the joints but am now thinking it will too easily crack. I was looking at your Bondo video and considered that a better alternative but wanted to know if you thought it would work or if you could recommend another product more flexible
Are joints Tounge and grove? Are trying make wall look flat or just want fill in gaps? What about None shrinking wood fillers or an Good Painter's Caulk.
Should a skip trowel be done on a second coat or add a third
1) is this the same exact thing you would do on drywall with the same product?
2) in the end you mentioned bucket mod being different from this, what's the difference?
Bucket mud is easier to sand, last for month if not years in the bucket, so you aren't throwing away the unused portions, it doesn't ruin your tools if you let it dry on them, and is much easier to use for beginners. You really don't want to use 5, 20, 45, or 90 minute mud on your final coat. It's too hard, it's hard to sand and doesn't take paint as well. Stick to the bucket unless you have 1/4 inch or deeper gaps to fill.
Use brown bag Durabond to repair Plaster
Use easy sand on the 2nd coat
I would say that those consistencies are more like frosting and cookie dough.
how old is that plaster and what brand? will this work on plaster less than 60 days?
Not sure what your question is getting at.
Would the build up cause humps
How is the mud different from already made I think puddy?
Powdered fast setting is way harder than premade bucket or box mud.
No sponge to wipe up the dust that's left on the wall?
Steve.
I use a damp microfiber cloth
Minimal dust left by either a dustless Porter Cable sander or hand sanding. Been doing this work for almost 40 years and no need to dust the wall after sanding and before priming.
Thank you!!!
Hmm. You really don't want to dry a setting compound out before it sets up. It will lose all strength.
I've used one for the past 15 years and never had an issue or a call back. I think it could depend on the mud you are using and if its prone to not have much glue in it
@@Van_bya_river ...appreciate your dialogue because we can all learn from it :) xoxo
Never found that to be the case.
@@A.S.P.R. Yeah the powdered compound or real plaster needs water and time to rehydrate. Once the mud has set, it can be dried out quickly. But remove the water prior to hydration and the gypsum or lime does not crystalize properly. Once the mud has set, it can be dried out quickly. We have been doing plasters, mostly with integral color, for around 40 years.
@@endoalley680 I guess I didn't understand your original statement. I agree....let it set first, then quick dry.
Hi, you do a great job narrating the video and what he was doing, but why they are not doing the talk?
Excelente
What about cracks in plaster?
Wish I didnt just see this video. Guess I wasted my money on a bucket of mud. I wont buy one ever again. I'll follow your video. Thanks for the information.
Lol,. This guy is full of shit. Bucket mud is perfect for beginners. Actual Drywall crews use bucket mud exclusively.. once your good enough with bucket mud you'll know when to use hot mud.
Bucket mud is good it just takes longer to dry and if you were skim coating walls ( making them smooth) I recommend the bucket it has a glue in it and sands easier. You could use powder for First coats and then use bucket for finish coat.
Bucket mud is EXACTLY what you ant if you are a beginner. This video is mostly crap.
Good to Know I have too patch up a wall?
Can you just let it dry naturally?
Yes. If its hot mud its usually dry at 4 to 5 times what the bag says which is working time. If its humid it might take longer. Hot and arid is faster. Put a fan on it to increase timing in any condition.
Why does no one talk about Plaster of Paris? Fast, hard, and no shrinkage.
These setting compounds have plaster of Paris in them. That’s why they dry hard and fast
That’s what she said
Methyl or isopropyl alcohol .
Why American Contractors not use Drywall Flat Boxes for Taping.?
You Should Never Plan On Sanding - Then You End Up With Very Little Sanding (Sanding Hard)(and Dirty) 😷
Hard to eliminate all sanding, but that being said, the goal is to have such good mudding technique that the sanding is minimal.
There's a lot of interesting stuff here but I'm kind of confused because my drywall has a texture to it that this doesn't have.
Because you are looking at a plaster wall, not drywall.
No gloves no 😷
That's right. Some people have a different level of risk tolerance than you do.
Thumbs up. I am trying to undo Spanish knife texture. Ugh.
👌🔥🔥👌🔥🔥👌
Just get a plasterer in no sanding
I’m skim coating a wall paper removal
Don't forget to use some bin zinsser primer first😉. That will allow to cover any exposed paper from removal and prevent bubbling
@@rickblaine7463 used Roman Rx-35
@@rickblaine7463 but thanks!👍
Wtf. I thought it said plaster repair. This is drywall.
If you'd like to be productive instead of wasting time with a very slow heat gun on a fairly large area, get a fan gently blowing across the wall and go do something else for a little while.
Of course. Heat gun is for small spots. We use a large 5000 CFM fan for bigger areas.
comment
"...little pieces of grit..."
Or as I call them, Boogers.
LMAO
I did metal work for a bit and picked up on calling them “Slag”
...I'm gonna use that one ...lol!
#Hitchhikers
That's fast?😂😂
You can get all the information that guy is selling, on youtube for free. From what I've seen here, you are better off with the free content, this place excluded.
Masks?????
This is terrible advice for beginners.