Used to hang 16' 5/8 on lids with two guys in my youth with insulation hanging down and a shit ton of can lights and vents to rout out this shit looks easy!!
As a drywaller of 40+ years. I've never seen it stacked up like that unless it's a drop ceiling room. We hang the lid the the top sheet on the wall supports the ceiling and then the bottom sheet supports the top sheet. That way when house settles, it all moves in unison.we even use a metal channel at wall to truss point so we can screw to channel to help with house settling. These guys move fast, just the way they do it must be to what ever is acceptable and required in their area. But I still hate the auto load guns.
Joel LaJuett seems like it should at least be tight to the lids and fire taped even if their putting up crown molding or whatever they call it there. Yep I had some of those guns talk about hard on your rotor cups and wrist and always leaves a round raised spot on screw holes you gotta mess with I got rid of em and went back to Milwaukee screw guns,
No point, the sheets aren't fire rated at all. It doesn't need to be either in this case. Working for builders is tight as it is. Your not going to give them extras, you will run yourself out of business so fast
Maxkil we got fire codes we have to go by even if you were going to put up a drop ceiling you still have to seal it up for draft stop, up to the peak of the attic too in some cases like residential duplexes and some commercial buildings double 5/8's on both sides of each unit dividing wall,were they want at least a 4 hr fire rating from one unit to the next it's a pain in the ass, no wonder you guys hang so fast.
For ALL the American experts on here for the love of Christ!!!!!! •We use cornice, you call it crown moulding. It’s made from the same plaster (drywall) material as the wall sheets. •The overwhelming majority of the time, fire walls / smoke walls & ceilings are only installed on adjoining or commercial properties. •Internal non load bearing walls in some cases can have stud spacing of 600 (23”) rather than our standard 450 (17”) •lintels in doorways over internal non load bearing walls? No, why would you? It achieves nothing. •Every build in Australia must comply with a fire, flood, wind etc rating in its applicable area. •We do NOT have electrical boxes for our outlets. Every circuit is protected with its own residual current device. •Plasterers (drywallers) use stud adhesive glue in Australia. That’s why you only see screws in the rebate and corners. (I’ve demo’d PLENTY of buildings, believe me, the glue hangs around bonded tight just as long as screws do) •The pace of these hangers getting paid a p/m rate is 100% commonplace. •Why there is no thermal insulation in the external walls i have no fucking idea 😂
See here in Canada what we do is once the walls of our igloo are up WE use whale snot to adhere the drywall then we take icicles to securely fasten the sheets to the walls the spacing is pretty fucking arbitrary but no matter since the snot freezes to strength level equal to cement! The icicles also act as barrier to any nosey polar bear that wants to crash the house as well. I but all you fuckers wish you were up to that standard eh?!?! I'll never understand why there are people that think that everyone does the same thing all over the world then comes on here and criticizes smh
When I was a younger man, I was all about hustling and breaking records. But As I've gotten older I've found myself demanding a higher level of quality out of my own work. Some of the stuff I did when I was 18. I would probably throw up if I saw it today. But back then I thought It was fine. That being said, There is a medium between quality and speed. Slow guys always want to hind behind quality. And Hacks always want to hind behind speed. So! optimal conditions or more complicated conditions. When you come to work you can either say to yourself "I'm gonna get the most work done and the best work done over everybody else." "Or youre not." No matter what you do or the conditions, you're Job is as demanding as you make it. P.S. Safety first
These guys are awesome! 1/4” block on bottom already prepped to drop rock on, adhesive added to studs to prevent Pop’s, screws instead of nails, tight joints, hang full sheets and cut on wall to save time measuring, cuts inside window frame for straight cuts and easy finish work. I don’t know what cornice is, as I too was worried about the gap, but clearly these guys know what they’re doing. They use big 20ft sheets to minimize joints, measuring and mud work. Wow! Anyone who doesn’t notice these small things and time savers has never done Sheetrock or home building.
When I started hanging rock in the mid 70s it was paying $ 2 .00 a sheet ,dam rite we busted ass .working tract houses and apartments they would cut us so tight on board you have to use scrap in the closets. I see nothing wrong with what they are doing. . 40 yrs experience in the drywall and plastering trades
Maxkil's reply is ever so polite despite some commentators not understanding the climate and building codes of different jurisdictions. Good one buddy. Keep it up
Now this is what a functional team looks like. Lots of teamwork. Was interesting in watching how one persons job leads to the next person job. Bloody well done.
That makes drywall installation looks like a easy job..no outlets, no o stocking on every room, no pipes, HVAC on the wall, no thick insulation and half in drywall..btw paisas abaratando El trabajo
Like a well oiled machine gentlmen, I'm a finisher but starting to do more of my own boarding so I can appreciate how well your crew is working together. Couldn't read too many of the other posts cuz so many sounded like trolls who don't know drywall
Putting up crown doesn’t mean you can leave a huge gap behind it. What if the home owner wants the crown changed to smaller style. Or wants it removed entirely. Never want to be stuck with a trim.
If you remove the cornice it will generally need to be re-set as the cornice adhesive in Australia must be much stronger than American crap and is not designed to come off
This is always how you can tell the people hanging aren't the ones finishing. Saves time on the front, makes the next guy take longer. Maybe there's a fancy corner system I don't know about, but those 1 inch+ ceiling gaps are going to need a lot of mud and tape to close up.
When I spent time in canada my first job was with a drywall crew, double sheeting ceilings with 5/8 thick 12 foot long boards and working like a dog for 10 hours a day my back was ripped off me at the end of each day. I lasted 7-8 weeks before I got a job in my own field (carpentry). Without doubt it was the toughest physical work I’ve ever done, so I have a lot of respect for drywall crews it’s very tough on the body.
Start with ceilings. Then do your top sheets on the walls. Doesnt matter if they're putting cornice or crown molding or whatever....it helps to secure the ceiling sheets, it allowd for a tighter wall to ceiling connection. It also leaves the gap on the floor as opposed to the ceiling. That gap is there for a few reasons. Especially over concrete....you never rest board or plaster onto concrete or it pulls moisture out
people need to understand that there are differant codes in other areas. here in virginia , usa we glue all studs , rafters , joist not on a seam , hang lid first , top wall then kick bottom sheet to close seam , only gap would be covered by base trim. we try to eliminate seams in small closets for the finishers , always good to keep them happy. always push electric wires deep in box to keep router off them lol
Yeah it's the same here, ceilings always first, then top sheets and everything needs to be super tight so we kick up all the bottoms. Fire codes in apartment buildings mean we have to double up any walls between apartment units and all bathrooms. For our 2nd layers they want as few seems as possible, so we try to stick to 12ft sections
I'm a carpenter for 40yrs,, it's fast,,but not quality, ,,always do the top board first ,it's called railroading, ,,we always made it easy for the taper
I remember those days. Cooler of beer, bag of swag, loaf of bread and some lunch meat. Butts and rips, end-overs, recessed edges and bastard joints, working in a Wake of scrap and dust. Good times.
My family has done drywall for probably 60+ yrs . What type of glue is that we always used the big tubes for the large glue guns . Glued basically the entire stud . Hang ceilings first top wall board then bottom. You don’t get all those gaps by stacking it .
Validus costs ?. Are u serious. Isolation costs almost nothing. They are using 89mm wide studs so u can fit in a 100mm knauf isolation wich kosts lik 3.50€ per m2
@@TTV_Validus it's just so bad to build like this not only don't they isolate but also no groundwood. I always use a 12mm ground wood to put my drywall on so u always have some meat if u wanna hang something the cost's are pretty good per m2 around 2.10€. so lets say a big house needs around 500m2 of isolation and ground wood that's only and extra 2800€'s on a full house. Totaly worth it of u ask me
In USA we hang the ceiling first and then we coming hanging from the top till the bottom. Looks better, professional and clean in that way. Is pointless they hang the ceiling first if they are going to start the walls from the bottom.
Here in Europe we are building a different way ,but i think there this is the standard. I also use Makita BFR550 .Good work guys, greatings from Hungary.
I didn't see anything wrong with their sheet placement and corners and edges where good cuts where clean etc.. Should be easy to tape anf mud. These guys are pretty good. If I moved for a tool on my toolbelt that quick I'd drop everything lol
This is the most F'd up sheetrock job I have ever seen. If I was the Forman on this job. I'd fire them all! I hate videos that try to make them look like they know what they're doing. These guys definitely do not.
Great job !!! I've been a commercial drywaller for over 20 years.. usually here in USA we use metal studs..and 5/8 board..and the boards are mainly stood up. Instead laying down , all flat joints.. I would love to finish a house hung like this!!! Only one flat joint and corners..no spotting screws.. no ceiling corner. Crowns everywhere...screw the haters! This is awesome...Wich I could hang some houses like this...
Yeah it's very good for the hangers, very good for the tapers, it's about as simple as it gets. Very fast as well... Yeah plenty of haters, that's ok, it's nothing I take personal. This is what it is here.... Cheers mate... Thanks for watching
Man they prolly get a kick back for finishing early I demo flooded houses and if we finish ahead of schedule we still get paid for the days we would have worked sometimes it's 1 or 2 extra days sometimes it's a week.
Is there any concerns about drywall paper in direct contact with the concrete wicking up moisture..? I usually leave it up about half way up the plate for that reason, and down pressure from snow load etc.
Screwing into wood and getting to use an adhesive makes life so much easier. Most of the buildings we have been doing use that flimsy metal framing for the studs and they constantly move or are not aligned tightly so the you can have a substantial difference between the line you're screwing. It's not uncommon to check the top and bottom measurements of column and have it be close to an inch in the difference and then you have to manually bend the stud out to match the edge of the boards. The smoothness of this installation is satisfying to watch.
Wow great to see how fast the sheeting goes up. I'm old school and riddle the board with screws that causes the board to take the shape of the crooked wood. The glue on the studs is genius at keeping the walls straight and much easier to mud.
I'm not going to criticize what you guys do I actually think it should be this way working in teams working safe but one thing I noticed is the opening in the transition from wall to ceiling yes you said cornice will go there which I assume means crown molding and I gotta say well if that's the code where you guys operate then cool by me but here in Maryland you always start walls from the top tight to the ceiling even if it has crown molding but otherwise clean work I like and yes I do this for a living
Nice videos enjoy watching them. Know this question might not be for you but on the outside frame there is only reflective film shouldn't there be insulation bats between the studs to achieve the R 2.8 required?
Drywall is a tough job to love, but the best part is when you see it all done and it’s done correctly! I came here today because I want to do better tomorrow!
@@Maxkil yeah, i got in it just in time for 12 and 14 ft high ceilings to become popular. And skylights? Don't get me started! Thankfully those have lost popularity here in the States.
No its because you have a narrow mindset and dont realise the whole world is not America. Here is a video to enlighten you a bit ruclips.net/video/iPwT4sVP-H0/видео.html
@@defy2598 What you say doesn't make sense. How could you say the whole world isn't America when a line voltage installation without a box wouldn't fly in most of the developed world.
R.I.P for the finisher how you guys fix those gaps in the inside corners you guys work fast but my question is those gaps in the corner like 2 inches opening
Maxkil. I'm working with this guy renovating houses here in NY. I was surprised when he starting installing the sheet rock (drywall) without using 1/2" scraps on the bottom to support and offer resistance to movement. Even worse, he framed on existing hardwood floors without removing down to the sub-floor. Do you guys believe in Always spacing by the floor +/- 1/2". Your video are great. BTW. Thanks.
@@jayh02110 and he said thats how they do it, and the finish is great. Yeah thats fine, took them 1 day to install all that rock and 3 weeks to float it out!! 😂😂
I haven't seen anyone complaining on this. Just opining on how awful their work is. This would never fly in the states. To me, it proves that in Australia, they build homes cheaply. No external insulation, not having 2×4's on hallway side. Not having a vapor barrier between ceiling studs and sheetrock. Not having Vapor barrier on outside wall. The list could go on.
every house iv worked on as never been like this. Is there no light switches or power points. There is bo insulation or anything.... What about the window stills? they will have hand saw marks on them where the architraves dont cover... hahahaba
A big gap at the ceiling , the intersecting corners should have a Slap Stud residential installation the ceiling is done first then the upper wall boards the bottom boards last if there is a gap it's easier to tape and small gaps are covered by the base trim usually 4 plus inches
You can tell from all the minor mistakes they are being told to work at that pace for the camera, and in reality they are much slower. 2 minutes after the camera stopped, all were on the floor gasping for air. Good job tho, I'll give ya's that
Adam Allen still hanging wrong . Top board should be hung first to help hold ceiling board. Also hanging tight to ceiling helps with heat transfer. I would not want to see the crown in a coupe years. Just my 2 cents
Jason Hockenberry If you've ever watched any videos of homes in australia you'll notice that there is almost always crown molding at the ceiling. That's just the construction standard there, apparently.
Mike Mcneil I've watched over a dozen videos of this crew in action. All I can say is that you could not be more wrong. This is the speed that most drywall crews work at even in the US.
These guys move and have a good flow. Different how they start with the bottom sheet, whatever works I guess. Haven’t seen windows cut out with a hacksaw before but it looks like it keeps the dust down opposed to a router. I use a makita dust extractor with mine works great.
Just wondering don't you guys have brace walls. I mean walls with some sort of different type of fixing. For example in nz we have gib standart and element named as GS1 which mean you should put 3 screws from each corner within 50 mm than 2 screws within 75 mm and then you continue with 150 mm between screws. Do you have something like that i oz ?
Stud adhesive is cool but the electrical blows my mind. In Canada (and I’m pretty sure US) the only wire you can pull through a trim ring like that is like cat5 or coax. Power with no boxes. Wild.
@@Maxkil i assumed it was going to be cornice (crown molding here in canada) but still. do you not have 54" board down there? the gap, and i know it will be covered, still looks like the cheapest way out and shoddy workmanship.
what do you lubricate the structures with before the paneling? I mean the blue ones in the buckets. and what is it for. what is the function of this? Does it go to steel profile structures as well? And for ceilings too? well done. I'm a fan of your work and your channel.
Very impressed with the speed at which you worked and how well you operated as a team. A well-oiled machine; no doubt. 2 Thessalonians 3 : 10 if any would not work, neither should he eat.
Everyone is usually superfast at their job when they want to be. I hate sheetrock but only because I don't do it often enough to get proficient with it. Usually do it by myself too. But throw me and a coworker on a leading edge panel set of a 747 wing and watch us amaze you there!! Whip right through hundreds of different sized holes, cold working, countersinking.. riveting etc. Work that would take the new guys 6 weeks we can knockout in 8 hours. Because it's what we do. Still impressive to watch people kick ass in their field.
Because that's how it's done here. Unless the sheets are square set they don't need to be tight as it gets covered in a gypsum paper faced cornice. Otherwise we would start from the top. Gets done every day like this for decades in Australia.
@@jaimehudson9026 What do you call it in the States??? "Crown Moulding", we Call it cor nice - It covers up the Big gap between the Ceiling and the Wall, with "Crown Moulding" - Cor Nice - No Need for a Perfect Fit, with Crown Moulding Covering it up, it Looks like a Million Dollars, but takes no Time to do, compared to Squared up corners to Ceilings that you are trying to achieve - get with the Times Merica, you are looking like the Backwoods Hillbillies, that the Rest of the World think you are.
@@jaimehudson9026 Burn Rating - Yes, but this is in single dwelling, not a complex or unit build, if it was in a Unit build, there would be a fire wall between one apartment to the other, but still use the same Cor nice method. There would be a stand alone Fire Wall between the 2 Dwellings and then another framing skin, not attached to the fire wall the the Gyprock would be attached to. Time is Money, material cost is very low, Plasterers wages in Australia are between $40 to $50 per hour, but the Australian Dollar is at at about 0.63 cents to the US dollar so only $25 to $32 US dollars per hour, may seem overpaying for a Manual job, but you have to pay for efficient quality workers.
@@jaimehudson9026 Not shit workers, efficient workers with an efficient way to do things, just breaking it down step by step and coming up with a efficient, cost affective way of doing things While Value adding. Crown Moulding on the Ceiling (Cornice) saves time (Wages) compared to squaring up the ceiling corners to the walls, cost of Cornice, is dirt cheap compared to the time it takes to do square up corners on the ceiling. And with Crown moulding to the ceiling, it is value adding, so you charge more of a premium.
@@jaimehudson9026 "Crown Moulding" as such is not like the US Crown moulding, it is called Cornice, it is made from the same material as your Plasterboard from our "Gyprock" not made from Wood or plastic etc. The Gun Hangers and Finishers of Drywall do not really get involved with the installing of the "Crown Moulding" / "Cornice", they leave that up to the older guys, who have been there and done that and who have come before them and done their time and who know how to fix a problem and do a very good, to make the end product look a million dollars, as they have the patience and experience. In regards to the Stringent Fire Codes of the USA, Each US State has it's own Standards and there is NO uniform Federal Minimum Code From East Coast to West Coast. Some States are Very Stringent, other states, not so much, some states have no codes at all if you are outside of a provincial area, so a free for all, no codes at all. Just sooo Lucky to Live in Australia, we seem to have our heads on straight, Not our Heads buried up our Arses, sort of know what we are doing. Unlike others in the Rest of the World, just Look at our response and outcome of the CCP Virus - Compare Australia to the State of Florida, basically the same Population, BIG DIFFERENCE in Outcome. Tag, your turn.
Down under drywall, what do you do with them gaps where ceilings meet the wall? Mud the heck out of it? In the USA 🇺🇲 we go from top down. But I could learn to be fast like these guys. I think using router creates lots of dust though....next time I'll use a regular saw and scribe it. Good technique though. Aussie construction
lol, mate 130 years is nothing!..... lol.. exactly man. the success of this video is due to the amount of people commenting on that gap. Even though there is cornice we should be taping it anyway they say in case they change their mind and don't want the cornice anymore. Its pretty entertaining! Thanks for writing in!
I reckon there should be a RUclips law that states if you think you can do it better or quicker, you have to show a video to prove it. That would cut the comments down by about 98% I'm tipping.
As a newbie to all things construction and wood, I like the tools & their speed & the way it all Looks so simple. Looking forward to learning and combining the best of both worlds --- Old School (Experienced Skill) with some of the newer ease of use tools --- in the trade. Good job gents and good comments folks.
But I'm not asking to do your work. You will find slow or fast, the outcome is the same all glued and screwed. We aren't missing anything. This is not America. Otherwise we would go tight to ceiling won't use glue but more screws. We should slow down make you feel better, if we kissed every screw first you think it would be better. I don't know bro
I have had problems when the sheets are glued instead of being screwed. If the studs are not straight the sheet will float over the void leaving a hollow. After one glue job I have insisted all the walls are screwed on now. The thickness of the glue can make door jambs wider making it a pain in the butt for finishing work. PS Get a wallboarders buddy if you hve a house full of window returns. I used one on the last house and loved it. The job required exactly 120 corner beads to be set
Your sheeting 10mm gyprock on a residential house. You could lift a 3600 sheet by yourself. 16mm firestop board or 9mm villa sheets would be more of a challenge. Very impressive work but
In every video I see from Australia of drywall there is a big gap at the trusses and top sheets they start from the bottom up, and a stack of crown molding sitting on the ground, I guess every house gets crown molding, In Canada only high end houses get the crown
You are 100 percent correct and because we don't have the same fire regulations as USA we don't have to cut another strip and tape that internal of ceiling and wall. Much quicker for everyone
The framing, electrical, insulation and drywall hanging would not meet code in any place that I have worked, but there are things they do that might speed me up. I’m impressed with the sheet length, the longest I can order is 12’.
Yeah. Nobody would be happy with that. However it gets a plaster cove cornice over it. Doesn't get taped in Australia, it's not a fire barrier just cosmetic
Yeah it's a really quick process... Pays less I'd say than other places... In cases where there needs to be a fire rating it's done tight and taped similar to what folks do in the states
Not professional at all, fast yes! But the lack of common knowledge outweighs the speed. Its going to take a finisher forever to float out all the ceilings seems and corners.
If you apply adhesive wouldn't it make repairs a little bit more challenging to remove the damaged drywall? I'm curious to know to see if it's worth buying
Good speed for Australia. House would be finished in roughly 6 hrs with 4 of you there. Understandable with cornice being at the top.if builders or clients changed their mind about cornice and changed to squareset and it's alr3ady sheeted then thats the builders problem to put a variation in. Code is different here in Australia. Like our states, have their own licensing systems that their code covers. Qbsa and whatever. $2.50 a square meter isnt bad brother at all. But if u pay labour wages to the fellas, best be completing it in 7hrs or less to make a profit. Im a chippy in bris. No holes and sheeted in a day, and as fast as the Bosnians mate. I don't think other countries realise we dont have fire code here unless a property is shared etc duplex (connected buildings) or in commercial. Or in rural. And wher3 as here any house with 5 or more rooms with ensuites(needs to be firechek) as it is classed as student accommodation or accommodation home in general. Just my 2 cents. Good work bro ✌
Hey bro we are in Brisbane too. Yeah you read these comments. People don't realise our way here. It's actually really efficient. Someone comments every few minutes about the gap where cornice is. Thanks for coming on. You on he southside?
I’m in Canada and your system is far superior. Much faster and easier. Avg around here is $1.80 for insulate, vapour barrier, board, tape, sand, and texture
Not sure how it's done over there but I assume that the blue adhesive stuff you put on the walls is the reason you only put screws towards the outside of the board. Am I correct? If so, I'm guessing that works just fine right?
I wish my contracts would be this easy. Half inch drywall , no outlets and no insolation
LoL, i was thinking the same thing...
Whats wrong with insalation
Used to hang 16' 5/8 on lids with two guys in my youth with insulation hanging down and a shit ton of can lights and vents to rout out this shit looks easy!!
Jajajjaajaj. Very. different. in the. usa . 5/8. In. Wall . Plugs etc.
No isolation what?
As a drywaller of 40+ years. I've never seen it stacked up like that unless it's a drop ceiling room. We hang the lid the the top sheet on the wall supports the ceiling and then the bottom sheet supports the top sheet. That way when house settles, it all moves in unison.we even use a metal channel at wall to truss point so we can screw to channel to help with house settling. These guys move fast, just the way they do it must be to what ever is acceptable and required in their area.
But I still hate the auto load guns.
Joel LaJuett seems like it should at least be tight to the lids and fire taped even if their putting up crown molding or whatever they call it there. Yep I had some of those guns talk about hard on your rotor cups and wrist and always leaves a round raised spot on screw holes you gotta mess with I got rid of em and went back to Milwaukee screw guns,
No point, the sheets aren't fire rated at all. It doesn't need to be either in this case.
Working for builders is tight as it is. Your not going to give them extras, you will run yourself out of business so fast
Maxkil we got fire codes we have to go by even if you were going to put up a drop ceiling you still have to seal it up for draft stop, up to the peak of the attic too in some cases like residential duplexes and some commercial buildings double 5/8's on both sides of each unit dividing wall,were they want at least a 4 hr fire rating from one unit to the next it's a pain in the ass, no wonder you guys hang so fast.
@@fabianvasquezjr8852 sounds like you've been on jobs like mine....lol.
Friggin hate dbl 5/8 on lid, especially if being made to wear dang hard hat.
Austrila. my friend.
When your chief says on friday "y'all can go home when its done."
Me...."just make it look good."
😂 👏👏. 👍
Phill is that you? your fired
as long as the check doesn't bounce!!!
For ALL the American experts on here for the love of Christ!!!!!!
•We use cornice, you call it crown moulding. It’s made from the same plaster (drywall) material as the wall sheets.
•The overwhelming majority of the time, fire walls / smoke walls & ceilings are only installed on adjoining or commercial properties.
•Internal non load bearing walls in some cases can have stud spacing of 600 (23”) rather than our standard 450 (17”)
•lintels in doorways over internal non load bearing walls? No, why would you? It achieves nothing.
•Every build in Australia must comply with a fire, flood, wind etc rating in its applicable area.
•We do NOT have electrical boxes for our outlets. Every circuit is protected with its own residual current device.
•Plasterers (drywallers) use stud adhesive glue in Australia. That’s why you only see screws in the rebate and corners. (I’ve demo’d PLENTY of buildings, believe me, the glue hangs around bonded tight just as long as screws do)
•The pace of these hangers getting paid a p/m rate is 100% commonplace.
•Why there is no thermal insulation in the external walls i have no fucking idea 😂
Beauty response lmao!
See here in Canada what we do is once the walls of our igloo are up WE use whale snot to adhere the drywall then we take icicles to securely fasten the sheets to the walls the spacing is pretty fucking arbitrary but no matter since the snot freezes to strength level equal to cement! The icicles also act as barrier to any nosey polar bear that wants to crash the house as well. I but all you fuckers wish you were up to that standard eh?!?! I'll never understand why there are people that think that everyone does the same thing all over the world then comes on here and criticizes smh
Does the blue glue also offer noise abatement?? They probably don't care as they dont use insulation for inside or outside walls
Whale snot is so hard to find these days. Haha. Good reply man very entertaining I told my kids
So heat or cold come thru the gap at the top and never heard of crown molding in closets
In the time they did this entire building? I'm still measuring my first piece and contemplating if i measured correctly. Yeah, i'm that slow
Lol! 😆😆🤣
Me too bro we just need more practice stay in the trades!
Not a bad thing
Maybe, but would you want to buy a house built like this and live in it.
Lmao it takes me 5 minutes to do 1 and these guys finishing a house in 10min😂
When I was a younger man, I was all about hustling and breaking records. But As I've gotten older I've found myself demanding a higher level of quality out of my own work. Some of the stuff I did when I was 18. I would probably throw up if I saw it today. But back then I thought It was fine. That being said, There is a medium between quality and speed. Slow guys always want to hind behind quality. And Hacks always want to hind behind speed. So! optimal conditions or more complicated conditions. When you come to work you can either say to yourself "I'm gonna get the most work done and the best work done over everybody else." "Or youre not." No matter what you do or the conditions, you're Job is as demanding as you make it.
P.S. Safety first
1/2” rock. On what looks like 24” centers or more ?
Because I know that’s not 5/8” from the way it’s carried and cut
These guys are awesome! 1/4” block on bottom already prepped to drop rock on, adhesive added to studs to prevent Pop’s, screws instead of nails, tight joints, hang full sheets and cut on wall to save time measuring, cuts inside window frame for straight cuts and easy finish work. I don’t know what cornice is, as I too was worried about the gap, but clearly these guys know what they’re doing. They use big 20ft sheets to minimize joints, measuring and mud work. Wow! Anyone who doesn’t notice these small things and time savers has never done Sheetrock or home building.
Yeah your entirly correct. it saves heaps of time. There's videos of us finishing with cornice as well
Maxkil I watched it. Basically crown molding in the US. 👍🏻
When I started hanging rock in the mid 70s it was paying $ 2 .00 a sheet ,dam rite we busted ass .working tract houses and apartments they would cut us so tight on board you have to use scrap in the closets. I see nothing wrong with what they are doing. . 40 yrs experience in the drywall and plastering trades
Let's play "Pick out the framing code violations!"
Ok shoot
😂😂😂😂 yes!
Maxkil's reply is ever so polite despite some commentators not understanding the climate and building codes of different jurisdictions. Good one buddy. Keep it up
Wait I thought this was California
Now this is what a functional team looks like. Lots of teamwork. Was interesting in watching how one persons job leads to the next person job. Bloody well done.
That makes drywall installation looks like a easy job..no outlets, no o stocking on every room, no pipes, HVAC on the wall, no thick insulation and half in drywall..btw paisas abaratando El trabajo
Like a well oiled machine gentlmen, I'm a finisher but starting to do more of my own boarding so I can appreciate how well your crew is working together. Couldn't read too many of the other posts cuz so many sounded like trolls who don't know drywall
Putting up crown doesn’t mean you can leave a huge gap behind it. What if the home owner wants the crown changed to smaller style. Or wants it removed entirely. Never want to be stuck with a trim.
Welcome to Australia
If you remove the cornice it will generally need to be re-set as the cornice adhesive in Australia must be much stronger than American crap and is not designed to come off
Yeah it's pretty solid stuff.
Worst job is taking down cornice
Exactly. It's called 🔥 tape finish. Lol. I didn't realize that was quarter of a inch drywall job. Yeah carry on
@brianohbrian burnsIn my part of the country, any area that is getting crown is just taped for fire code, we don't finish anything we don't have to!
This is always how you can tell the people hanging aren't the ones finishing. Saves time on the front, makes the next guy take longer. Maybe there's a fancy corner system I don't know about, but those 1 inch+ ceiling gaps are going to need a lot of mud and tape to close up.
When I spent time in canada my first job was with a drywall crew, double sheeting ceilings with 5/8 thick 12 foot long boards and working like a dog for 10 hours a day my back was ripped off me at the end of each day. I lasted 7-8 weeks before I got a job in my own field (carpentry). Without doubt it was the toughest physical work I’ve ever done, so I have a lot of respect for drywall crews it’s very tough on the body.
Hi
Sir
You are welcome, it is My actual job in here puerto natales Magallanes
Start with ceilings. Then do your top sheets on the walls. Doesnt matter if they're putting cornice or crown molding or whatever....it helps to secure the ceiling sheets, it allowd for a tighter wall to ceiling connection. It also leaves the gap on the floor as opposed to the ceiling. That gap is there for a few reasons. Especially over concrete....you never rest board or plaster onto concrete or it pulls moisture out
they had 1/2 inch spacers a to bottom
Said the same thing. This does not look good at all and the finisher is gonna be pissed
@evanferguson1105 They don't finish the wall to ceiling corner, saves alot of work.
people need to understand that there are differant codes in other areas. here in virginia , usa we glue all studs , rafters , joist not on a seam , hang lid first , top wall then kick bottom sheet to close seam , only gap would be covered by base trim. we try to eliminate seams in small closets for the finishers , always good to keep them happy. always push electric wires deep in box to keep router off them lol
Yeah it's the same here, ceilings always first, then top sheets and everything needs to be super tight so we kick up all the bottoms. Fire codes in apartment buildings mean we have to double up any walls between apartment units and all bathrooms. For our 2nd layers they want as few seems as possible, so we try to stick to 12ft sections
I'm a carpenter for 40yrs,, it's fast,,but not quality, ,,always do the top board first ,it's called railroading, ,,we always made it easy for the taper
Hey Frank, that's how it's done here mate. We could certainly do that if need be.thanks for the comment
Maxkil ... well... you doing it wrong there...
And you would know because.. you live where? Obviously not there..
duMaurier15 I live where we do things rigth...
no if its crown molding all the taper does is mud the nails thats it no taping required
I remember those days. Cooler of beer, bag of swag, loaf of bread and some lunch meat. Butts and rips, end-overs, recessed edges and bastard joints, working in a Wake of scrap and dust. Good times.
Now your a Walmart greeter !!
My family has done drywall for probably 60+ yrs . What type of glue is that we always used the big tubes for the large glue guns . Glued basically the entire stud . Hang ceilings first top wall board then bottom. You don’t get all those gaps by stacking it .
john johnson the gap is for cornice, square set is always top down and the glue is most likely knauf adhesive
Now I know why my bathroom is so cold in winter. No insulations.
Most bathrooms dont have insulation because of the cost
What's the winter temp in Australia?
Validus costs ?. Are u serious. Isolation costs almost nothing. They are using 89mm wide studs so u can fit in a 100mm knauf isolation wich kosts lik 3.50€ per m2
@@dickyo6952 All the houses I've done they didn't do it because of the cost. Companies who sell homes put the cheapest stuff. I know from experience.
@@TTV_Validus it's just so bad to build like this not only don't they isolate but also no groundwood. I always use a 12mm ground wood to put my drywall on so u always have some meat if u wanna hang something the cost's are pretty good per m2 around 2.10€. so lets say a big house needs around 500m2 of isolation and ground wood that's only and extra 2800€'s on a full house. Totaly worth it of u ask me
I've done this now a few times and I have a total new respect for it. It's very satisfying watching these guys and how perfect they get it.
Thanks my man... Please subscribe and check out my recent videos of the finishing..
Thanks again for tuning in
Impressive how a video with no one talking, just action, and decent music makes you stick around.
Thanks Sergio. Glad you liked it. Please subscribe I have more great work action coming up every few days
Every single house I was in in Australia has crown moulding on the ceilings, now I know why.
In USA we hang the ceiling first and then we coming hanging from the top till the bottom. Looks better, professional and clean in that way. Is pointless they hang the ceiling first if they are going to start the walls from the bottom.
😭😭😭😭😭😭
Minute 7
Always find it amazing how things are done differently in different parts of the world.
Here in Europe we are building a different way ,but i think there this is the standard. I also use Makita BFR550 .Good work guys, greatings from Hungary.
Thanks Basz, this is as cheap as it gets. Not every house like this
Omg. Good luck finishers.
They are finishers. Check latest video
I didn't see anything wrong with their sheet placement and corners and edges where good cuts where clean etc.. Should be easy to tape anf mud. These guys are pretty good. If I moved for a tool on my toolbelt that quick I'd drop everything lol
They have some thing going over the gaps
Prob completely out of square trim carpenter's hate your guts right now
This is the most F'd up sheetrock job I have ever seen. If I was the Forman on this job. I'd fire them all! I hate videos that try to make them look like they know what they're doing. These guys definitely do not.
Great job !!! I've been a commercial drywaller for over 20 years.. usually here in USA we use metal studs..and 5/8 board..and the boards are mainly stood up. Instead laying down , all flat joints.. I would love to finish a house hung like this!!! Only one flat joint and corners..no spotting screws.. no ceiling corner. Crowns everywhere...screw the haters! This is awesome...Wich I could hang some houses like this...
Yeah it's very good for the hangers, very good for the tapers, it's about as simple as it gets. Very fast as well... Yeah plenty of haters, that's ok, it's nothing I take personal. This is what it is here.... Cheers mate... Thanks for watching
I've been hanging sheetrock 33 years... Where is the Spanish music? Lol
I do commercial too the reason they use 5/8s is because it's fire rated and 1/2inch is not.
No matter how fast you work guys your check is still coming out short.
Man they prolly get a kick back for finishing early I demo flooded houses and if we finish ahead of schedule we still get paid for the days we would have worked sometimes it's 1 or 2 extra days sometimes it's a week.
Damn Frankie you couldn't have said that any better !!
Bad attitude... They make good money!!!!! I did it and retired at 48!!!!
Is there any concerns about drywall paper in direct contact with the concrete wicking up moisture..? I usually leave it up about half way up the plate for that reason, and down pressure from snow load etc.
Yeah for sure mate, we pack it with the 10mm sheet to keep it off the ground
Here in Illinois you wouldn't have a chance. We're constantly fixing rotten board. It's usually in garages though where the lathers get too fast.
Lol. Took me five weekends to finish even one room. I don't know how anyone could drywall every day. Really hard work.
Yeah, I think the better you get the easier everything becomes. I don't do this everyday. You don't see many overweight drywallers
THATS TOO MANY DAYS!! 😒 😒😒
@@Maxkil HAHA
Screwing into wood and getting to use an adhesive makes life so much easier. Most of the buildings we have been doing use that flimsy metal framing for the studs and they constantly move or are not aligned tightly so the you can have a substantial difference between the line you're screwing. It's not uncommon to check the top and bottom measurements of column and have it be close to an inch in the difference and then you have to manually bend the stud out to match the edge of the boards.
The smoothness of this installation is satisfying to watch.
Wow great to see how fast the sheeting goes up. I'm old school and riddle the board with screws that causes the board to take the shape of the crooked wood. The glue on the studs is genius at keeping the walls straight and much easier to mud.
Yeah less screws with the stud adhesive. Holds very well
I'm not going to criticize what you guys do I actually think it should be this way working in teams working safe but one thing I noticed is the opening in the transition from wall to ceiling yes you said cornice will go there which I assume means crown molding and I gotta say well if that's the code where you guys operate then cool by me but here in Maryland you always start walls from the top tight to the ceiling even if it has crown molding but otherwise clean work I like and yes I do this for a living
Nice videos enjoy watching them. Know this question might not be for you but on the outside frame there is only reflective film shouldn't there be insulation bats between the studs to achieve the R 2.8 required?
1/4" dry wall,. 24 on center, no outlets. Must be nice....
No tape along the top... It's great
Maxkil it’s cheap as fuck is what it is...
1/2 inch, not 1/4 inch.
10mm.
vzgsxr 10mm is 3/8ths
@@jaimehudson9026 LOL
Im home sick today so I watch other people do my job. Thats when you know you love your job
haha yeah, i film the job and spend ages editing and looking at drywall all day, then on computer... lol Thats when you know you love your job #2
Damn I wish I could love it like you .
Drywall is a tough job to love, but the best part is when you see it all done and it’s done correctly! I came here today because I want to do better tomorrow!
Or cause you aint got your trade down right lol.
We all learn from others mistakes as well
@@bryantg1412 nah
No wonder houses can go up so fast these days. I can’t imagine how long this size house would take using lath and plaster.
Ahhhh, to see 8ft high ceilings. Haven't seen those on a consistent basis since i first learned drywall back in 1988. Brings a tear to my eye. Lol.
Haha . That's funny.
Yeah doesn't get much better than 8ft ceilings and cornice in Australia
@@Maxkil yeah, i got in it just in time for 12 and 14 ft high ceilings to become popular. And skylights? Don't get me started! Thankfully those have lost popularity here in the States.
Yeah nice. .. thankfully I never do high ceilings...
Please subscribe and keep in touch David.. cheers mate
@@Maxkil Done! Cheers😁
There's no eletrical boxes cause this type of dry wall glows in the dark lol
No its because you have a narrow mindset and dont realise the whole world is not America.
Here is a video to enlighten you a bit
ruclips.net/video/iPwT4sVP-H0/видео.html
Defy @ 😂😂😂
@@defy2598 bullshit
@@defy2598 What you say doesn't make sense. How could you say the whole world isn't America when a line voltage installation without a box wouldn't fly in most of the developed world.
LMFAO!!!!
ever since doing this in my garage, i've had great respect for the guys who do this
R.I.P for the finisher how you guys fix those gaps in the inside corners you guys work fast but my question is those gaps in the corner like 2 inches opening
The finisher doesn't touch those gaps. Cornice is hung there
These guys are the finishers as well...
Check other videos too see
Look up how to I stall cornice.
Cornice is decorative....drywall isnt. Tighten that shit up bud....bugs, water, air etc will get through and eat that shit up in no time
Got it
Beautiful organization and labor distribution methods. A truly well oiled machine. I hope the contractor pays these men well. They deserve it.
Maxkil. I'm working with this guy renovating houses here in NY. I was surprised when he starting installing the sheet rock (drywall) without using 1/2" scraps on the bottom to support and offer resistance to movement. Even worse, he framed on existing hardwood floors without removing down to the sub-floor.
Do you guys believe in Always spacing by the floor +/- 1/2".
Your video are great. BTW.
Thanks.
A finisher is going to walk in and either: A. Double his price, or B: Laugh, turn around and walk out...
Actually we finish, we finish perfect... And we paint... We paint perfect. That's how it's done here bro
Luckily we do our own hanging
Wtf is up with outting the bottom piece in first!? 😂😂 fookin 2 in rip at the top...
@@jayh02110 and he said thats how they do it, and the finish is great. Yeah thats fine, took them 1 day to install all that rock and 3 weeks to float it out!! 😂😂
jason hamilton cornice covers the gap. Not everything is square set in Australia
I only clicked the video because i knew there would be a bunch of experts complaining.
I wasn't let down.
Staged for video but you obviously would’ve known that ,right...
Staged for video. Ahaha
I haven't seen anyone complaining on this. Just opining on how awful their work is. This would never fly in the states. To me, it proves that in Australia, they build homes cheaply. No external insulation, not having 2×4's on hallway side. Not having a vapor barrier between ceiling studs and sheetrock. Not having Vapor barrier on outside wall. The list could go on.
every house iv worked on as never been like this. Is there no light switches or power points. There is bo insulation or anything.... What about the window stills? they will have hand saw marks on them where the architraves dont cover... hahahaba
wabash 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
A big gap at the ceiling , the intersecting corners should have a Slap Stud residential installation the ceiling is done first then the upper wall boards the bottom boards last if there is a gap it's easier to tape and small gaps are covered by the base trim usually 4 plus inches
So that’s why my drywall looks like crap in my Ryan home, always wondered.
All of ryan homes are a disaster
Drywall should be tight to the ceiling I'll just say your hanging drywall wrong
Jason Hockenberry have cornice going up, never tight for cornice
You can tell from all the minor mistakes they are being told to work at that pace for the camera, and in reality they are much slower. 2 minutes after the camera stopped, all were on the floor gasping for air.
Good job tho, I'll give ya's that
Adam Allen still hanging wrong . Top board should be hung first to help hold ceiling board. Also hanging tight to ceiling helps with heat transfer. I would not want to see the crown in a coupe years. Just my 2 cents
Jason Hockenberry
If you've ever watched any videos of homes in australia you'll notice that there is almost always crown molding at the ceiling. That's just the construction standard there, apparently.
Mike Mcneil
I've watched over a dozen videos of this crew in action. All I can say is that you could not be more wrong. This is the speed that most drywall crews work at even in the US.
These guys move and have a good flow. Different how they start with the bottom sheet, whatever works I guess. Haven’t seen windows cut out with a hacksaw before but it looks like it keeps the dust down opposed to a router. I use a makita dust extractor with mine works great.
I’d love to be the taper on these jobs, not having to finish top corners due to cornice would be a nice treat !
By the way, nice work !
yeah for sure, makes it way easier to hang as well
Just wondering don't you guys have brace walls. I mean walls with some sort of different type of fixing. For example in nz we have gib standart and element named as GS1 which mean you should put 3 screws from each corner within 50 mm than 2 screws within 75 mm and then you continue with 150 mm between screws. Do you have something like that i oz ?
Yeah there is ply bracing more screws and no glue on walls where tiles would be in bathroom.
Stud adhesive is cool but the electrical blows my mind. In Canada (and I’m pretty sure US) the only wire you can pull through a trim ring like that is like cat5 or coax. Power with no boxes. Wild.
Anyone notice there is like not outlets in this house .
Yeah people have noticed that..
Some rooms don't get any lights... Jokes.... Different outlets to what your used to. They are just plates
How do you cover the 2" gap up on top corners
Very easily and quickly Cornice crown coving
@@Maxkil i assumed it was going to be cornice (crown molding here in canada) but still.
do you not have 54" board down there?
the gap, and i know it will be covered, still looks like the cheapest way out and shoddy workmanship.
what do you lubricate the structures with before the paneling? I mean the blue ones in the buckets. and what is it for. what is the function of this? Does it go to steel profile structures as well? And for ceilings too? well done. I'm a fan of your work and your channel.
Very impressed with the speed at which you worked and how well you operated as a team. A well-oiled machine; no doubt. 2 Thessalonians 3 : 10 if any would not work, neither should he eat.
Try to work with gyproc plates from belgium 😂 its the same as drywall but more weight
Where's the insulation on the exterior walls? I'm guessing it's not needed in Australia.
@6:16 look at how the wall moves about half on inch when he is putting the screw in. wow garbage framing.
It’s 70x35mm framing with one row of nogging it’s cheap Australian housing or as they call it “stick frame”
i saw that, i agree
It's really amazing how much faster they do it when you put it on "Fast Forward"! 🤣
On video for RUclips they running like crazy but do they work like hat when there is nobody filming them
No , they just paid actors pretending and I sped up the tape
So yall dont have insulation in the walls wherever yall are at ?
Normally we do mate. Not on this one... Which I think is crazy as well
I would. Like to see them go this fast on a old out of squar house
Jose Morales I saw a wall move when he was screwing the drywall...and when is the last time I saw a perfectly square house? Never.
This project is easy as hell. On one of the rooms the sheetrock isnt touching the ceiling so that's a sign that they dont know much.
@@TTV_Validus they use a cornice moulding that the top. The gap doesnt matter.
Or hanging 12 footers type c 🤣
I'm curious as to why they didn't start with the ceiling?
At 3:23 of this video, the guy kicks a hole in the drywall.
it does not matter...its fast...:))))shitty job...
Tapers will get it 😂
A smart taper knows that careless hanger made that hole and he should charge.......dumb ass
You've got sharp eyes...I had to watch 3x to catch it lol... MGTOW.
Baseboard will cover it.
I didn't know you could get long drywall sheets like that.
Everyone is usually superfast at their job when they want to be. I hate sheetrock but only because I don't do it often enough to get proficient with it. Usually do it by myself too. But throw me and a coworker on a leading edge panel set of a 747 wing and watch us amaze you there!! Whip right through hundreds of different sized holes, cold working, countersinking.. riveting etc. Work that would take the new guys 6 weeks we can knockout in 8 hours. Because it's what we do.
Still impressive to watch people kick ass in their field.
Why would you start from the bottom you have to start from the top and then down🤦🏽♂️
Because that's how it's done here. Unless the sheets are square set they don't need to be tight as it gets covered in a gypsum paper faced cornice. Otherwise we would start from the top. Gets done every day like this for decades in Australia.
@@jaimehudson9026 What do you call it in the States??? "Crown Moulding", we Call it cor nice - It covers up the Big gap between the Ceiling and the Wall, with "Crown Moulding" - Cor Nice - No Need for a Perfect Fit, with Crown Moulding Covering it up, it Looks like a Million Dollars, but takes no Time to do, compared to Squared up corners to Ceilings that you are trying to achieve - get with the Times Merica, you are looking like the Backwoods Hillbillies, that the Rest of the World think you are.
@@jaimehudson9026 Burn Rating - Yes, but this is in single dwelling, not a complex or unit build, if it was in a Unit build, there would be a fire wall between one apartment to the other, but still use the same Cor nice method. There would be a stand alone Fire Wall between the 2 Dwellings and then another framing skin, not attached to the fire wall the the Gyprock would be attached to.
Time is Money, material cost is very low, Plasterers wages in Australia are between $40 to $50 per hour, but the Australian Dollar is at at about 0.63 cents to the US dollar so only $25 to $32 US dollars per hour, may seem overpaying for a Manual job, but you have to pay for efficient quality workers.
@@jaimehudson9026 Not shit workers, efficient workers with an efficient way to do things, just breaking it down step by step and coming up with a efficient, cost affective way of doing things While Value adding. Crown Moulding on the Ceiling (Cornice) saves time (Wages) compared to squaring up the ceiling corners to the walls, cost of Cornice, is dirt cheap compared to the time it takes to do square up corners on the ceiling. And with Crown moulding to the ceiling, it is value adding, so you charge more of a premium.
@@jaimehudson9026 "Crown Moulding" as such is not like the US Crown moulding, it is called Cornice, it is made from the same material as your Plasterboard from our "Gyprock" not made from Wood or plastic etc. The Gun Hangers and Finishers of Drywall do not really get involved with the installing of the "Crown Moulding" / "Cornice", they leave that up to the older guys, who have been there and done that and who have come before them and done their time and who know how to fix a problem and do a very good, to make the end product look a million dollars, as they have the patience and experience. In regards to the Stringent Fire Codes of the USA, Each US State has it's own Standards and there is NO uniform Federal Minimum Code From East Coast to West Coast. Some States are Very Stringent, other states, not so much, some states have no codes at all if you are outside of a provincial area, so a free for all, no codes at all. Just sooo Lucky to Live in Australia, we seem to have our heads on straight, Not our Heads buried up our Arses, sort of know what we are doing. Unlike others in the Rest of the World, just Look at our response and outcome of the CCP Virus - Compare Australia to the State of Florida, basically the same Population, BIG DIFFERENCE in Outcome. Tag, your turn.
I thought you hang the top sheet first so it’s tight to the ceiling
Done drywall over 10 plus year and you are right !!! I'll hate to do tape and finishing after this guys work ....top sheet should be hang first
Down under drywall, what do you do with them gaps where ceilings meet the wall? Mud the heck out of it? In the USA 🇺🇲 we go from top down. But I could learn to be fast like these guys. I think using router creates lots of dust though....next time I'll use a regular saw and scribe it. Good technique though. Aussie construction
Well that’s definitely not in Alabama with 99.9% humidity and 98 degrees
I live in Pennsylvania the humidity has been brutal this year, 14 in over normal rainfall. Step outside and my glasses fog up. Lol
All the comments are gold...ive been hanging board for 130 years and you always do the top sheet first .... Mate its got 90 mm cove , just throw it up
lol, mate 130 years is nothing!.....
lol.. exactly man. the success of this video is due to the amount of people commenting on that gap. Even though there is cornice we should be taping it anyway they say in case they change their mind and don't want the cornice anymore. Its pretty entertaining! Thanks for writing in!
@@Maxkil Yep, square set costs a LOT more money.
Great job guys. Now I'd like to know what the blue adhesive you were using is?
I reckon there should be a RUclips law that states if you think you can do it better or quicker, you have to show a video to prove it. That would cut the comments down by about 98% I'm tipping.
Hehe , yeah I'm always open to share others videos on here.
As a newbie to all things construction and wood, I like the tools & their speed & the way it all Looks so simple. Looking forward to learning and combining the best of both worlds --- Old School (Experienced Skill) with some of the newer ease of use tools --- in the trade. Good job gents and good comments folks.
@@blackattack2469 I see both old and new.....new tools but I haven't seen someone backscore and cut out a window with a chopsaw since the 80's!
It’s not about speed. It’s quality. I wouldn’t hire you
But I'm not asking to do your work.
You will find slow or fast, the outcome is the same all glued and screwed.
We aren't missing anything.
This is not America. Otherwise we would go tight to ceiling won't use glue but more screws. We should slow down make you feel better, if we kissed every screw first you think it would be better. I don't know bro
if you want it done today you would
Maxkil you guys are trash lol
Your the best!
So go Check out one of the finishing videos, one of my last videos. You will see that gap was no mistake. You will see how it's done.
@@Maxkil you're*
I have had problems when the sheets are glued instead of being screwed. If the studs are not straight the sheet will float over the void leaving a hollow. After one glue job I have insisted all the walls are screwed on now. The thickness of the glue can make door jambs wider making it a pain in the butt for finishing work.
PS Get a wallboarders buddy if you hve a house full of window returns. I used one on the last house and loved it. The job required exactly 120 corner beads to be set
Your sheeting 10mm gyprock on a residential house. You could lift a 3600 sheet by yourself. 16mm firestop board or 9mm villa sheets would be more of a challenge. Very impressive work but
Just by reading other smart and well said comments, I see I don't need to bash these dudes work.LOL LAUGHABLE AT BEST
That's some Christmas kindness.
In every video I see from Australia of drywall there is a big gap at the trusses and top sheets they start from the bottom up, and a stack of crown molding sitting on the ground, I guess every house gets crown molding, In Canada only high end houses get the crown
where are the electric outlet boxes?
We don't have boxes just cables and plates which have the points later screwed into the plates
One Guess!!!!
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Trying to save electricity
Yeah these are the houses that burn down later. And everyone says “I don’t know what happened!”
Boxes are covered up ha
Where the F is this? All the romex not in boxes? This is australia? What? They dont have boxes? hmm
So except for the perimeter screws glue holds everything. So does glue hold as long as a screw?
"No one can use the restroom until the project is completed!"
Pretty easy when everything’s pre cut ehh
Spanning over windows and openings. Hope they have spots for all those scraps?
My only guess with the large gap at the top is there's crown going everywhere lol.
You are 100 percent correct and because we don't have the same fire regulations as USA we don't have to cut another strip and tape that internal of ceiling and wall. Much quicker for everyone
@@Maxkil soooo siiiiicccckkk🤙🏼
'Drywall Construction Workers Sheet Room in Minutes' And go home exhausted at midday.
Busyboy 42 and they make $200 a day,slaves
amoniman 200 for a half’s day worth of work and that’s bad ahahahahaha that’s 50 an hour if that full day is 8 hours
i board a room like that myself in about 30 minutes ceiling included but then again i learned from brutal mennonites
Lmfao not me we hang 120 sheets a day if wanted to and make a grand in 2 days
The framing, electrical, insulation and drywall hanging would not meet code in any place that I have worked, but there are things they do that might speed me up. I’m impressed with the sheet length, the longest I can order is 12’.
Sheet length was the first thing I noticed too, lol. I was immediately jealous!
It would've been faster if they wouldn't have been tripping over each other.
When you it in for the money sure. If this was my house id tell them to slow down and use some more screws.
I’d tell them to get out
The drywall is done right their using screws and adhesive not their fault customer didnt request them to intall iinsulation or has electrical outlets
use more screws.
that's funny. you do know (not) that they glued the field?
as somebody else already said, i'm just here to read from the experts.
I get efficiency, but I'd take quality any day over this rushed hanging. And no insolation? Does it never get cold in Australia?
I wouldn't be happy if my hangers left me all those angles to flat tape before I can angle tape them.
Yeah. Nobody would be happy with that. However it gets a plaster cove cornice over it. Doesn't get taped in Australia, it's not a fire barrier just cosmetic
@@Maxkil ah okay. I see. They did knock it out quicly. That's how you make money. In that case, nice job!!
Yeah it's a really quick process... Pays less I'd say than other places... In cases where there needs to be a fire rating it's done tight and taped similar to what folks do in the states
Know how/experience, right tools for the job and workers with some hustle and there you have it.
Not professional at all, fast yes! But the lack of common knowledge outweighs the speed. Its going to take a finisher forever to float out all the ceilings seems and corners.
If you apply adhesive wouldn't it make repairs a little bit more challenging to remove the damaged drywall? I'm curious to know to see if it's worth buying
Whats the blue stuff
Adhesive
Good speed for Australia. House would be finished in roughly 6 hrs with 4 of you there. Understandable with cornice being at the top.if builders or clients changed their mind about cornice and changed to squareset and it's alr3ady sheeted then thats the builders problem to put a variation in. Code is different here in Australia. Like our states, have their own licensing systems that their code covers. Qbsa and whatever. $2.50 a square meter isnt bad brother at all. But if u pay labour wages to the fellas, best be completing it in 7hrs or less to make a profit. Im a chippy in bris. No holes and sheeted in a day, and as fast as the Bosnians mate. I don't think other countries realise we dont have fire code here unless a property is shared etc duplex (connected buildings) or in commercial. Or in rural. And wher3 as here any house with 5 or more rooms with ensuites(needs to be firechek) as it is classed as student accommodation or accommodation home in general. Just my 2 cents. Good work bro
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Hey bro we are in Brisbane too. Yeah you read these comments. People don't realise our way here. It's actually really efficient. Someone comments every few minutes about the gap where cornice is.
Thanks for coming on. You on he southside?
I’m in Canada and your system is far superior. Much faster and easier. Avg around here is $1.80 for insulate, vapour barrier, board, tape, sand, and texture
Not sure how it's done over there but I assume that the blue adhesive stuff you put on the walls is the reason you only put screws towards the outside of the board. Am I correct? If so, I'm guessing that works just fine right?
9:24 video quality matches build quality