@@maxklein3761 cheers pal, was back in Richmond today, for 730, over slept this morning, I was knackered! Shae got me up with a phone call!! At home now, glad to chill out. Judy is making a roast . Happy days, poured my self a little whisky and I’ll get on with editing today’s video. Cheers for the support max. 👍👍
@mastersmurf74 old school grafter! Would love to plaster alongside a man like yourself 💪 still on the grind when your at home editing, you must dream of plastering at this point 🤣
Lovely job. Looked really sharp around the edges. Well worth taking the extra time to get the quality. The old guy was lucky he got up to answer his phone!
Yeah man, he was. That lath plaster is actually quite dangerous, it’s sooo heavy, it’s amazing they get it up there in the 1st place. The previous video shows us taking it down and the depth of it! 👍👍
Love the videos! Regarding screws 'breaking' the plasterboard or shooting through into the stud, try plasterboard drill bits. They take any guesswork out of the procedure.
Wet mix can be a Nightmare on Ceilings, I've 2 Kraft's, 20 Steel ( had 17 year's she's a Beauty), 20 Carbon (7 years, Old Faithful) Best Brand towels I've ever bought, I also like the Curry 10/14 and 16 steel Trowels, the Kraft "20" I use on (Walls New board), 2 passes Neary Cover a Slab, I Call it my Money Maker 😉 Nice Finish Polish Ceiling, 💷 in the Bank
That old ruptured board? ... Was it ruptured on the other side? ... If not, should've used that ... don't fancy the chances of that not blowing a bit later 😒 ... Hope not, as it turned out pretty good 👍🤠
Yes .. They stopped all that .. the only reason for not using the other side now is because of the bound edge ... but for general use, no difference really... Maybe slightly more suction if it's grey ... but negligable ..
I can’t remember how the old edges went, I would imagine with scrim on the joints and the plaster is set, I can’t see the paper on the brown side failing. Brown side does pull in faster.
If Ur on a job for more than a couple of days soak that nela in clean water or any trowel. The flouride or watever is in the water eats the scum off them.. clean trowels.
Yeah, sometimes I leave the setting bucket full of water over the weekend with trowels in. Breaks it down. If I get the chance. It’s mainly that plastic strip they put on top of those nelas.
Good job guys, even the coving gets done. The guys who worked on the horse hair plaster must've been built like Arnold Schwarzenegger. How things change. Nod UK
Tasty work loving the videos well done mate 👍 👏
Thanks 👍
Fair play to that 5 o'clock finish on a Sunday! Keep up the grind Smurf. Your growing fast my friend! love the content!
@@maxklein3761 cheers pal, was back in Richmond today, for 730, over slept this morning, I was knackered! Shae got me up with a phone call!! At home now, glad to chill out. Judy is making a roast . Happy days, poured my self a little whisky and I’ll get on with editing today’s video.
Cheers for the support max. 👍👍
@mastersmurf74 old school grafter! Would love to plaster alongside a man like yourself 💪 still on the grind when your at home editing, you must dream of plastering at this point 🤣
Lovely job. Looked really sharp around the edges. Well worth taking the extra time to get the quality. The old guy was lucky he got up to answer his phone!
Yeah man, he was. That lath plaster is actually quite dangerous, it’s sooo heavy, it’s amazing they get it up there in the 1st place. The previous video shows us taking it down and the depth of it! 👍👍
Im a decorator and diy plasterer Brilliant job
Cheers pal
Enjoyed that, cracking job 👌
Thanks 👍
Love the videos! Regarding screws 'breaking' the plasterboard or shooting through into the stud, try plasterboard drill bits. They take any guesswork out of the procedure.
I should get a collated gun, we just don’t do enough tacking to warrant it. You are on about those little cup things right?
@@Plastersmurf74 Yes thats right, do a search for 'Plasterboard drill bit'. Just watching todays video, you're on fire!!
I wouldn't even paint that, looks great as is.
👍
Hi Smurf old Victorian ceiling all over the shop try magic mix quarter bond rest multi hangs around longer too!! 👍
Thanks
Lovely job
Cheers pal
Wet mix can be a Nightmare on Ceilings, I've 2 Kraft's, 20 Steel ( had 17 year's she's a Beauty), 20 Carbon (7 years, Old Faithful) Best Brand towels I've ever bought, I also like the Curry 10/14 and 16 steel Trowels, the Kraft "20" I use on (Walls New board), 2 passes Neary Cover a Slab, I Call it my Money Maker 😉 Nice Finish Polish Ceiling, 💷 in the Bank
I’ll have a have a look at Kraft trowels, I didn’t think they did them to be honest. I have a 15inch magesium hawk by Kraft, had it years!! ,
I’ve just ordered a 20x5 carbon from Switzerland 👍👍, better be good my friend. Hope it’s straight!!
holy shit that is rough
Why not bond it save you a lot of hassle?
It was very thick and we wanted to save any untreated areas from falling in the future.
That old ruptured board? ... Was it ruptured on the other side? ... If not, should've used that ... don't fancy the chances of that not blowing a bit later 😒 ... Hope not, as it turned out pretty good 👍🤠
@@petemoring67 I didn’t even check the other side. It used to be brown side for plaster and white for artex.
Yes .. They stopped all that .. the only reason for not using the other side now is because of the bound edge ... but for general use, no difference really... Maybe slightly more suction if it's grey ... but negligable ..
I can’t remember how the old edges went, I would imagine with scrim on the joints and the plaster is set, I can’t see the paper on the brown side failing. Brown side does pull in faster.
If Ur on a job for more than a couple of days soak that nela in clean water or any trowel. The flouride or watever is in the water eats the scum off them.. clean trowels.
Yeah, sometimes I leave the setting bucket full of water over the weekend with trowels in. Breaks it down. If I get the chance. It’s mainly that plastic strip they put on top of those nelas.
Good job guys, even the coving gets done. The guys who worked on the horse hair plaster must've been built like Arnold Schwarzenegger. How things change. Nod UK