I've been doing drywall for 17 years man and I tell ya I've learned a hell of a lot from watching a few of your videos. Thanks for sharing your knowledge. It's really appreciated. 👍
I’ve done drywall mostly on my own stuff for years and I know enough to be dangerous but I no where near have the talent or expertise that you possess. When I’m doing mud I keep talking to myself and saying “ thin to win , or leave it alone , don’t mess with it” I was taught drywall by a neighbor who was a bit of a perfectionist. I appreciate quality drywall finishing. You know your sh__ ! I’ve learned a lot . Hope you keep posting 👍👍👍
Wow. I’ve spent so much time agonizing about the solution to my drywall problem (after removing previous homeowners’ wallpaper, my walls looked just like yours do in the beginning of this video! I wish I had seen this video years ago. Absolutely fantastic. Thank you so much, seriously. If you’re looking for a video that resolves all fear about tackling a surfacing problem with your drywall - look no farther, folks!
A plasterer asked us to buy and paint a coat onto our ceiling before he come todo it as he said I will make the plaster bond better. Tbh I’ve been around construction and all different types and never heard of it before but bought a tin noticed how watery it is and that’s when I discovered this video. Thanks for explaining it ceilings is done and it’s not a very messy application at all. Definitely smells strong 😂
@@THEDRYWALLDOCTOR1 went on quite well and dried quickly, after doing some research it has many uses . When we strip the walls from wallpaper would you recommend applying a coat to the stripped wall before painting?
We prime all repairs with this stuff. We have a bucket and roller that “sits” in the stuff and goes to every job. There are a bunch of uses well beyond even this video. Thanks for the vid and showing people this product!
@@doggy255 wallpaper adhesive sealing(before paint, after stripping), around shower areas(helps waterproof), over porous plaster/concrete for durabond repairs, under dead flat paint for the absolute best flat you’ve ever seen, sealing skim coat, it goes on and on. We also really like Roman 999rx and Kilz klear
Thank you! We just built a home. I loved our living room for the Xmas tree and that moved other things, which in turn I redid my cord hider behind my tv. Now moving back I am afraid I will need this product:( & next time I’m using command strips on my cord hider backs.
Yeah, I've found that Kilz is just for priming over water stains. I tried it many times over torn paper and it barely helped. I use the RX-35/Pro999 which is very similar to the gaurdz and it works MUCH better. I have some Gaurdz too and it's a great product.
Painter for 30 years and we use Guardz often, good stuff. We also use it after a wallpaper removal. It activates and locks in any residual glue unlike a oil primer that just sits on top of the glue
Jim Taylor I just finished removing wallpaper from 3 rooms at my mothers house getting all the glue off now the walls look clean from any glue but I don’t want to chance it there plaster walls real hard and smooth should I sand them at all? And is this a water based primer? And is one coat enough
I just used Kilz Original to coat a plaster repair around a basement railing mounting bracket. Learn from my mistakes. I had a perfectly smooth Level 5 finish sanded on a plaster patch where a basement railing was mounted, top coated with General Purpose Joint Compound (green lid). I normally use 20 minute hot mud, and will go back to that. I had it sanded to perfection with 600 grit. GP is very fragile and nicks and scratches very easily. I sprayed Kilz Original on it to prime it. It sprays thick, dries quick, and leaves behind a hard, but textured finish, resembling a high-end splatter look like you often see in new construction. It's pretty, but I was after a smooth Level 5. I had to sand it to get it smooth. It did make the GP joint compound hard. However, if GUARDZ gives makes the joint compound or paper hard, without the other, that's what I want, and I do have some of that laying around from another job where I used it to block wall paper glue. So the bottom line is, If you want it hard and smooth, you want GUARDZ. If you want it hard with a high-end perfect splatter finish like you will only normally find in new construction, you want Kilz Original. Kilz Original would provide instant tooth and cling to whatever you put over it. I will probably use it up fixing water damaged plaster ceilings.
OMG I'm working on a room that looks JUST LIKE THAT. I tore down 40+ year old 1970's faux wood paneling and everyplace there was adhesive the drywall top layer was torn. I'll be using GARDZ to prime over the torn paper, and then hitting all those spots with mud, then priming and painting. Thanks for the boost of confidence that my plan will work! I'd rather not replace all that drywall, which was going to be plan 'B'.
I used to use Kilz oil-based for a lot of things like stain cover wise and never had a problem. However recently I have had issues with it almost like they've changed something in the product. Guards is the best for things like this. I've started using bin primer for stains. ✌
I heard about that stuff a couple years ago. Its expensive but worth every penny. I had to skim coat a bedroom where the sheetrock installers must have used a framing hammer to nail it up. The paper was broken at literally every nailing spot. I cut them all out and sealed the exposed rock and torn paper with the Guardz. As I recall I also sealed the skim final skim coat also. I put far more time into it than I should've but the end product was glass smooth and no new defects since then. It probably made better sense to replace the rock but thats not a fun job either.
Gardz is very slippery when dried. I had some problem with adhesion of a new compound over Guardz. Water based Primer may pull a thin coat of compound from the wall treated with Gardz, creating a mess and extra work. I mix Gardz with primer sealer now.
Awesome video. That's exactly what I do in that situation. Gardz is pretty awesome for that. Thanks for sharing! And that's coming from a painter of 26 years.
great video. im going thrue somthing like that and this has been the best, one doubt I have, so I don't have to remove the remaining dust on the drywall before adding the gardz.
I been using this stuff at work in the uk to seal Artex which is a textured coating pattern on the ceiling and it’s great at sealing soft Artex turning it rock hard great video 👍
Hey man that’s a top secret product ...very few tapers know of ... Im one of 3 only taper that work for one of the biggest college in NYS after all our kids move out for the year we run thru all the dorm rooms and scrap cut out and GARDZ the walls very good product ...also works good to seal up plaster after you get the loose stuff off
Thanks for the info! I'm doing a lot of wallpaper removal in room that was a nursery and the clowns and circus animals don't fit my style. Now that I have it torn off it's good to find the ultimate fix! And YES the drywall is yellowed and YES the old joint compound is chalky and comes off on my hand - so pretty much the same scenario. Next is the kids bathroom with crayola wallpaper and handprints where the kids put their hand in the paint, then put a print on top of the paper ... ALL OVER THE PLACE!! IT'S COMING DOWN! I've got a few more of your videos to watch and I'm loving them.
Similar to BIN primer? BIN is a great stain-blocker, and ready to paint in 45 minutes. Alcohol based (extremely odorous). When I worked for an insurance restoration company, we'd go in and spray the stuff to remove smoke-smell or kill mold. Expensive, though.
BIN is a Zinsser product as well. There are SEVERAL 'BIN' products, so you have to get the right one. The alcohol based (shellac) covers smoke smell quite well. The oil based covers stains well and sticks to most everything. The water based I've not found a good use other than ruining paint brushes. It is not a good stain block, smoke smell is not abated, and it will not adhere to much. I am certain there is a good use, I've not found it.
Can i skip the step of removing residual glue after taking wallpaper off and scraping the backing? I started sponging the residual glue and its soooo much work. If i can skip that step with this, that would be amazing
Dammit man! I just skimmed over a room that had paneling removed and didn't have this product. The walls that I did looked similar to the walls that you're doing in the vid; except the previous owner didn't bother taping. I had to tape and mud over patchy pieces of drywall.
I used BIN shellac (alcohol based) for a huge paper bubble in my drywall near a duct. That stuff is awesome and sticks to anything! If you drip it on something, immediately wipe it up because it will dry quickly.
I do a lot of skimming over vinyl that was tore off which leaves a lot of blisters and bubbles.. they usually prime it for to help seel it but honestly doesnt work well.. would this product stop the blister and bubbles.?
Paul Dawson it helps, yes. Sand the walls first. Get the rough loose paper off. Then apply this. Scrape and sand again before applying the mudd. At least this is what I do.
Hello. I had to remove old wallpaper on plaster to repair cracks on the wall. I plan on skim coating with compound and protecting the plaster by using fibafuse sheets. Should I use Gardz before the skim cost?
Merry Christmas to you too !! Love the videos ! I have been using the USG Cover Coat and it is amazing stuff ! You can almost water trowel it as good as lime and gauging !
See thats crazy, I see quite a few people say dont use Guardz. It makes blisters like crazy. Use Kiltz, Now i see Guardz people say kiltz is no good use Giardz. I use both what ever is available and havent had any problems with either
Hi Mr.Anderson, I’m trying to replace some wallpaper I had and I finished taking it off. I have the paint I want to paint it but I don’t know how to proceed. My drywall was previously primed before they put the wall paper on. Some of the primer and drywall got damaged. The damage is really little so I’m not sure if I need to reprime all the walls. I was hoping you could guide me if in what to do next. Thanks
Can you send me some pictures to thedrywallphd@gmail I think if you wiped the walls down it maybe good enough and then you touch them up where you had the damage you should only have to Prime the spots but if it's got a gloss to the paint you may want to Prime the entire surface I've seen paint just peel right off of old paint because it wasn't primed
problem surface sealer is awesome for sealing in remaining drywall adhesive on plaster walls. we took down 6 rooms of wallpaper using a steamer but couldn't get all of the adhesive off. so we used problem surface sealer, 2 coats. seals it in like a clear resin
Thank you for the great video. I am trying to repair a very damaged section of drywall that had a backsplash tile ripped off, leaving the adhesive. There is a lot of brown paper showing. I applied the first coat of Gardz tonight and the brown paper bubbled up. Is that alright as it will be covered with joint compound or did I do something wrong? Thank you.
Great video! I am new to skimming. I have a similar wall and ceiling problem and will roll some Gardz on it before skimming. My question is do I apply Gardz again AFTER the skim coat and before the paint? Much appreciated!
Thanks for the videos. My question is I have a nursery and they used plaster on the drywall and can’t sand it. So started to scrape it with TONS of paper peel. Should I just rehang or use this stuff? Literally 1/4 the paper is peeling =(
I guess that depends on how much drywall you're talkin about if it's a lot of drywall I would just use the gardz if it's only a couple of sheets it might be worth it just to replace it
@@THEDRYWALLDOCTOR1 I’m counting around 6-8 sheets and after working on it a little more looks like most of the paper is peeling...would be cheaper to use the Gardz but I know cheaper isn’t always better. Btw your videos are going to be my savior to refinish my garage!
Thank you very much for your great videos! Can I use the Gardz on top of the wallpaper and paint after that? Or I really need to put All-purpose compound on top of Gardz? Thank you,
If the wallpaper isn't just falling off the walls with a little water then just prime it you don't need the guards but if you pulled the wallpaper off and damage the drywall paper then you're going to want to use cards
Would you skim such a big wall with the green all purpose because of all the glue it has or would you use the plus 3 to skim so much brown paper...much appreciated
I've used the regular Zinsser primer sealer. I'll try out the Guards next time I have a lot of touchups. Liked the video except for the rant about people not liking videos :) 😆 LOL
Since guards dries to a semi-gloss sheen do you have to resand it before applying a skim coat ? Or directly after the guards is dry can you just apply it without sanding ?
I need help. I am decorating my bathroom, I have taken the very old wall paper off (all of it has come off easy peasy, there is none left), but underneath the paper there are very old layers of paint, in patches everywhere, probably about 1mm thick, it is in a terrible state. In areas over this old paint, very porous plaster has been badly applied. Will I need to skim it or will Gardz do a sufficient job of evening it out? If I do have to skim it, do I need Gardz? If it is recommended, do I Gardz first, then skim or the other way round? Complete novice here, first time I have ever done this. Any help would be very much appreciated!
Lmao. Doc this a good one lol. What tunes? I went through my whole playlist lol. I had to do a bathroom that had the wall-paper right on the wall, (remember the old gold and fuzz stuff?) did the big wall the usual way. but when it came to a inset mirrored med chest..no way. Sanded the fuzz off and used this stuff called pro-999. Two coats and a skim coat....no bumps no peel and it's been a yr and more. You and yours have a very Merry Christmas, and a blessed new yr. (I think it was Floyd lol) Peace.
Sherwin Williams gave me a gallon of Pro-999 at cost to try out. Was one of the worst products I've ever used. Maybe 10% better than using nothing at all.
Just finished one like this. Used Gardz (two coats).... not so much. The drywall paper had separated internally when the panelling was pulled. The result? Blisters, blisters, blisters. Had to cut them out and actually tape over a bunch of them. Would have been better off to just pull the drywall and replace it. Tuition paid.
Are you using a setting mud, an all purpose mud, or something else, over the sealer on the damaged areas?? Does it matter which mud goes over the sealer? I'd been using dewaxed shellac but will give this a try if it's cheaper...
#drywall I have the same scenario like you have. I applied gardz then waited 3 hours then sand it then I applied the All Purpose. But I started to seeing bubbles :( Did I do something wrong?
I've been doing drywall for 17 years man and I tell ya I've learned a hell of a lot from watching a few of your videos. Thanks for sharing your knowledge. It's really appreciated. 👍
I’ve done drywall mostly on my own stuff for years and I know enough to be dangerous but I no where near have the talent or expertise that you possess. When I’m doing mud I keep talking to myself and saying “ thin to win , or leave it alone , don’t mess with it” I was taught drywall by a neighbor who was a bit of a perfectionist. I appreciate quality drywall finishing. You know your sh__ ! I’ve learned a lot . Hope you keep posting 👍👍👍
Wow. I’ve spent so much time agonizing about the solution to my drywall problem (after removing previous homeowners’ wallpaper, my walls looked just like yours do in the beginning of this video! I wish I had seen this video years ago. Absolutely fantastic. Thank you so much, seriously. If you’re looking for a video that resolves all fear about tackling a surfacing problem with your drywall - look no farther, folks!
I been painting for 35 years. Great product
Life saver! This came up just in time and saving me an enourmous headache down the road.
Arrives Friday and very, very excited to give this stuff a go.
A plasterer asked us to buy and paint a coat onto our ceiling before he come todo it as he said I will make the plaster bond better. Tbh I’ve been around construction and all different types and never heard of it before but bought a tin noticed how watery it is and that’s when I discovered this video. Thanks for explaining it ceilings is done and it’s not a very messy application at all. Definitely smells strong 😂
I was just using it today on plaster patches
@@THEDRYWALLDOCTOR1 went on quite well and dried quickly, after doing some research it has many uses . When we strip the walls from wallpaper would you recommend applying a coat to the stripped wall before painting?
Absolutely
We prime all repairs with this stuff. We have a bucket and roller that “sits” in the stuff and goes to every job. There are a bunch of uses well beyond even this video. Thanks for the vid and showing people this product!
Do you mind elaborating on the different uses? Thanks if so!
@@doggy255 wallpaper adhesive sealing(before paint, after stripping), around shower areas(helps waterproof), over porous plaster/concrete for durabond repairs, under dead flat paint for the absolute best flat you’ve ever seen, sealing skim coat, it goes on and on. We also really like Roman 999rx and Kilz klear
Thank you. That was very helpful. I was debating to get this or not and now I'm sold. Much, much thanks.
I saw this stuff in action once, and then I forgot the product name! Thank you! Wonderful stuff
Thank you! We just built a home. I loved our living room for the Xmas tree and that moved other things, which in turn I redid my cord hider behind my tv. Now moving back I am afraid I will need this product:( & next time I’m using command strips on my cord hider backs.
Yeah, I've found that Kilz is just for priming over water stains. I tried it many times over torn paper and it barely helped. I use the RX-35/Pro999 which is very similar to the gaurdz and it works MUCH better. I have some Gaurdz too and it's a great product.
I've used Gardz and I wouldn't use anything else. Great product and so easy to use. Great instructional video.
Subscribed .. Everyone can benefit from this knowledge. Thanks
Thank you for practical advice! Also, really like the Proverb!!!
Wish I found this video sooner. Thank you for sharing
Painter for 30 years and we use Guardz often, good stuff. We also use it after a wallpaper removal. It activates and locks in any residual glue unlike a oil primer that just sits on top of the glue
Jim Taylor I just finished removing wallpaper from 3 rooms at my mothers house getting all the glue off now the walls look clean from any glue but I don’t want to chance it there plaster walls real hard and smooth should I sand them at all? And is this a water based primer? And is one coat enough
I just used Kilz Original to coat a plaster repair around a basement railing mounting bracket. Learn from my mistakes.
I had a perfectly smooth Level 5 finish sanded on a plaster patch where a basement railing was mounted, top coated with General Purpose Joint Compound (green lid). I normally use 20 minute hot mud, and will go back to that. I had it sanded to perfection with 600 grit. GP is very fragile and nicks and scratches very easily. I sprayed Kilz Original on it to prime it. It sprays thick, dries quick, and leaves behind a hard, but textured finish, resembling a high-end splatter look like you often see in new construction. It's pretty, but I was after a smooth Level 5. I had to sand it to get it smooth. It did make the GP joint compound hard. However, if GUARDZ gives makes the joint compound or paper hard, without the other, that's what I want, and I do have some of that laying around from another job where I used it to block wall paper glue. So the bottom line is, If you want it hard and smooth, you want GUARDZ. If you want it hard with a high-end perfect splatter finish like you will only normally find in new construction, you want Kilz Original. Kilz Original would provide instant tooth and cling to whatever you put over it. I will probably use it up fixing water damaged plaster ceilings.
OMG I'm working on a room that looks JUST LIKE THAT. I tore down 40+ year old 1970's faux wood paneling and everyplace there was adhesive the drywall top layer was torn. I'll be using GARDZ to prime over the torn paper, and then hitting all those spots with mud, then priming and painting. Thanks for the boost of confidence that my plan will work! I'd rather not replace all that drywall, which was going to be plan 'B'.
I used to use Kilz oil-based for a lot of things like stain cover wise and never had a problem. However recently I have had issues with it almost like they've changed something in the product. Guards is the best for things like this. I've started using bin primer for stains. ✌
I heard about that stuff a couple years ago. Its expensive but worth every penny. I had to skim coat a bedroom where the sheetrock installers must have used a framing hammer to nail it up. The paper was broken at literally every nailing spot. I cut them all out and sealed the exposed rock and torn paper with the Guardz. As I recall I also sealed the skim final skim coat also. I put far more time into it than I should've but the end product was glass smooth and no new defects since then. It probably made better sense to replace the rock but thats not a fun job either.
I've been using that product for years it's kinda like a trade secret great for torn wallpaper. Great video 👍
Can you paint over it ? Or do you have to use a primer first
Loved the video man Thanks for putting it up for those of us who cant afford to pay someone else to do it.
Zinsser makes alot of great products.
Gardz is very slippery when dried. I had some problem with adhesion of a new compound over Guardz.
Water based Primer may pull a thin coat of compound from the wall treated with Gardz, creating a mess and extra work.
I mix Gardz with primer sealer now.
Awesome video. That's exactly what I do in that situation. Gardz is pretty awesome for that. Thanks for sharing! And that's coming from a painter of 26 years.
great video. im going thrue somthing like that and this has been the best, one doubt I have, so I don't have to remove the remaining dust on the drywall before adding the gardz.
great video,never skim coated, thanks -more confidant of doing this
I’ve been running into this when taking down wallpaper. Thanks for the info Doc!
I think you just saved me a tun of headache. Much appreciation for you sharing your knowledge 🙋🏻
Great video. Gardz is the best.
All ready = already
Marry = Merry.
It definitely does the job found this gem many years ago keep up the great work, Ray.
Love all your videos. Learned a lot and taken it out to the job site.
Any tricks for restoring the pe
I been using this stuff at work in the uk to seal Artex which is a textured coating pattern on the ceiling and it’s great at sealing soft Artex turning it rock hard great video 👍
Hey man that’s a top secret product ...very few tapers know of ... Im one of 3 only taper that work for one of the biggest college in NYS after all our kids move out for the year we run thru all the dorm rooms and scrap cut out and GARDZ the walls very good product ...also works good to seal up plaster after you get the loose stuff off
Yes it is.
Thanks for the info! I'm doing a lot of wallpaper removal in room that was a nursery and the clowns and circus animals don't fit my style. Now that I have it torn off it's good to find the ultimate fix! And YES the drywall is yellowed and YES the old joint compound is chalky and comes off on my hand - so pretty much the same scenario. Next is the kids bathroom with crayola wallpaper and handprints where the kids put their hand in the paint, then put a print on top of the paper ... ALL OVER THE PLACE!! IT'S COMING DOWN! I've got a few more of your videos to watch and I'm loving them.
Similar to BIN primer? BIN is a great stain-blocker, and ready to paint in 45 minutes. Alcohol based (extremely odorous). When I worked for an insurance restoration company, we'd go in and spray the stuff to remove smoke-smell or kill mold. Expensive, though.
It's different Gardz isn't a primer it's more of a sealer for repairing the drywall
And Gardz is really inexpensive as well!
BIN is a Zinsser product as well. There are SEVERAL 'BIN' products, so you have to get the right one. The alcohol based (shellac) covers smoke smell quite well. The oil based covers stains well and sticks to most everything. The water based I've not found a good use other than ruining paint brushes. It is not a good stain block, smoke smell is not abated, and it will not adhere to much. I am certain there is a good use, I've not found it.
@@THEDRYWALLDOCTOR1 should I repair drywall with gardz, then use bin primer?
No you should be able to just use the bin primer
love the humor and education
Ray got a buzz. Lol. Merry Christmas to you and your family🎄
That’s a cost saving option. I’m going to use this on my moms house that I’m working on. Thanks
We use by the pallet load. I love Gardz but you have to let it dry. We put fans on it.
love your videos keep em coming u can never learn enough
Can i skip the step of removing residual glue after taking wallpaper off and scraping the backing? I started sponging the residual glue and its soooo much work. If i can skip that step with this, that would be amazing
Yes you can but you may have to skim the entire surface afterwards for a smooth wall.
Dammit man! I just skimmed over a room that had paneling removed and didn't have this product. The walls that I did looked similar to the walls that you're doing in the vid; except the previous owner didn't bother taping. I had to tape and mud over patchy pieces of drywall.
Thank you for this useful information!!!
I used BIN shellac (alcohol based) for a huge paper bubble in my drywall near a duct. That stuff is awesome and sticks to anything! If you drip it on something, immediately wipe it up because it will dry quickly.
Helpful video. Thank you. So, for a small bathroom, toilet and sink only, you think one coat of this product, some type of mud will be enough?
Yes
Thanks for your informational video
Great tip Ray - thanks for posting - Have a great Christmas!
You too
I do a lot of skimming over vinyl that was tore off which leaves a lot of blisters and bubbles.. they usually prime it for to help seel it but honestly doesnt work well.. would this product stop the blister and bubbles.?
Paul Dawson it helps, yes. Sand the walls first. Get the rough loose paper off. Then apply this. Scrape and sand again before applying the mudd. At least this is what I do.
Exactly
Really enjoyed this thank you for sharing your tips appreciate it.
GREAT VIDEO THANK YOU!
Hello. I had to remove old wallpaper on plaster to repair cracks on the wall. I plan on skim coating with compound and protecting the plaster by using fibafuse sheets. Should I use Gardz before the skim cost?
Yes!!!
Merry Christmas to you too !! Love the videos ! I have been using the USG Cover Coat and it is amazing stuff ! You can almost water trowel it as good as lime and gauging !
See thats crazy, I see quite a few people say dont use Guardz. It makes blisters like crazy. Use Kiltz, Now i see Guardz people say kiltz is no good use Giardz. I use both what ever is available and havent had any problems with either
Hello looking to use this on walls I’ve just stripped the paper off? Will this be good to cover wall paper paste and the holes which I have filled in?
Yes
Hi Mr.Anderson, I’m trying to replace some wallpaper I had and I finished taking it off. I have the paint I want to paint it but I don’t know how to proceed. My drywall was previously primed before they put the wall paper on. Some of the primer and drywall got damaged. The damage is really little so I’m not sure if I need to reprime all the walls. I was hoping you could guide me if in what to do next. Thanks
Can you send me some pictures to thedrywallphd@gmail I think if you wiped the walls down it maybe good enough and then you touch them up where you had the damage you should only have to Prime the spots but if it's got a gloss to the paint you may want to Prime the entire surface I've seen paint just peel right off of old paint because it wasn't primed
Another great tip thanks for sharing . Merry Christmas to you as well .
problem surface sealer is awesome for sealing in remaining drywall adhesive on plaster walls. we took down 6 rooms of wallpaper using a steamer but couldn't get all of the adhesive off. so we used problem surface sealer, 2 coats. seals it in like a clear resin
Thank you for the great video. I am trying to repair a very damaged section of drywall that had a backsplash tile ripped off, leaving the adhesive. There is a lot of brown paper showing. I applied the first coat of Gardz tonight and the brown paper bubbled up. Is that alright as it will be covered with joint compound or did I do something wrong? Thank you.
That's right you may have to remove the bubbles and apply another coat of gardz
@@THEDRYWALLDOCTOR1 I’m confused. So the GARDZ caused the Bubbles? & now you need to remove the bubbles & apply more GARDZ?
No the gardz just let you know where some of the bad bubbles are.
If they make a Drywall Doctor movie, Kevin Spacey will play the lead.
Love your work man 🫡
Thanks
@@THEDRYWALLDOCTOR1 I seen your rubber knife video. I had to have one
This is very reassuring as we're about to buy some! Realistically how many m2 will 5L cover? Many thanks, keep up the great work!
They make that product in a white also. I use this all the time. And they Al's make a great stain blocker and that's called BIN.
I’m a hawk and trowel guy. Watching pan and knife drives me up the wall. But I still watched the whole video. lol.
@Glenn Shoup who cares. Get the mud on the wall 🤷♂️
Should I use this before skim coating old walls and ceiling
yes
Can this be used over osb to prevent the tannin from bleeding through the primer and paint?
Yes but use kilz stain blocker in the green can.
Great video! I am new to skimming. I have a similar wall and ceiling problem and will roll some Gardz on it before skimming. My question is do I apply Gardz again AFTER the skim coat and before the paint? Much appreciated!
No not necessary you should be able to just Prime and paint afterwards
Great video
So what was all the clever old foxes using BEFORE these products came out?
Will that work for areas where paint flaked off to the drywall? Can you just repaint or will it need to be skim coated after the Gardz?
It will probably need to be skim coated if you have chunks of paint missing.
Thanks for the videos. My question is I have a nursery and they used plaster on the drywall and can’t sand it. So started to scrape it with TONS of paper peel. Should I just rehang or use this stuff?
Literally 1/4 the paper is peeling =(
I guess that depends on how much drywall you're talkin about if it's a lot of drywall I would just use the gardz if it's only a couple of sheets it might be worth it just to replace it
@@THEDRYWALLDOCTOR1 I’m counting around 6-8 sheets and after working on it a little more looks like most of the paper is peeling...would be cheaper to use the Gardz but I know cheaper isn’t always better. Btw your videos are going to be my savior to refinish my garage!
u prefer this stuf over regular primer?
Only if the face paper is damaged it's thinner and soaks into the drywall to make a hard surface.
@@THEDRYWALLDOCTOR1 can u get away with just primer over paper?
Yes
Can I clean the residue glue from wallpaper with TSP and water than use this sealer primer?
Yes
Exactly what I’m doing tomorrow. 3 rooms worth. Going to be fun
Thank you very much for your great videos! Can I use the Gardz on top of the wallpaper and paint after that? Or I really need to put All-purpose compound on top of Gardz? Thank you,
If the wallpaper isn't just falling off the walls with a little water then just prime it you don't need the guards but if you pulled the wallpaper off and damage the drywall paper then you're going to want to use cards
Would you skim such a big wall with the green all purpose because of all the glue it has or would you use the plus 3 to skim so much brown paper...much appreciated
I didn't I just use + 3 but if you have the time skimming it with the green All Purpose with the glue in it is a much better fix
I've used the regular Zinsser primer sealer. I'll try out the Guards next time I have a lot of touchups. Liked the video except for the rant about people not liking videos :) 😆 LOL
so for new sheetrock which primer would you recommend , i enjoy your vid's alot cheers
ROCK CRUSHER PVA PRIMER. 👍🏻
I like kilz 2 on new board.
Thx for your help 🙏
What if I sanded past the brown paper. Can I use this stuff on the bare white gypsum?
Yes
Can this Gardz be used as primer/base coat?
Yes
But there's no pigment to it and my need mutable coats of paint to cover
Did you do anything to prep the torn drywall?. Sand or scrape? Mine has some fairly deep gouged spots. Thank you
No give it a good coat let it dry scrap what you can and spot coat where needed let it dry then start mudding
Thank you so Much!!!! 😊👍
How much is the cost difference and labor difference compared to just covering with like 1/2 or 3/8 drywall
With changing the window jambs the trim and everything else it would cost more the laminate
Since guards dries to a semi-gloss sheen do you have to resand it before applying a skim coat ? Or directly after the guards is dry can you just apply it without sanding ?
Apply it without Sandy but you may want to scrape a little bit just to get off some of the little things that are sticking up
Gardz, love it!
Requires 24 hrs to dry b4 you can mud it..
Try bullseye clear shellac. Does the SAME thing without the odor and yiur mudding in 30-60 mins.!
I need help. I am decorating my bathroom, I have taken the very old wall paper off (all of it has come off easy peasy, there is none left), but underneath the paper there are very old layers of paint, in patches everywhere, probably about 1mm thick, it is in a terrible state. In areas over this old paint, very porous plaster has been badly applied. Will I need to skim it or will Gardz do a sufficient job of evening it out? If I do have to skim it, do I need Gardz? If it is recommended, do I Gardz first, then skim or the other way round? Complete novice here, first time I have ever done this. Any help would be very much appreciated!
Guards first and then skim it
@@THEDRYWALLDOCTOR1 Thank you
Will it help mud stick better for skim?
Yes make sure you use it before any mud is put on the wall
Thanks man.. Have a great day
Can i seal, before taping and mudding joints, the seal again? Any help would be great!!
You'll have to use a primer sealer after you tape and mud so yes
So i can use the problem surface sealer before AND after i prefill gaps, apply mesh tape, and mud the joints?
Great video! Can you apply latex paint on top of the Guardz? Or do you need a primer first and paint second?
Yes just paint it.
@@THEDRYWALLDOCTOR1 Thank you! The Gardz is drying right now!
Lmao.
Doc this a good one lol.
What tunes? I went through my whole playlist lol.
I had to do a bathroom that had the wall-paper right on the wall,
(remember the old gold and fuzz stuff?)
did the big wall the usual way. but when it came to a inset
mirrored med chest..no way.
Sanded the fuzz off and used this stuff called pro-999.
Two coats and a skim coat....no bumps no peel and it's been a yr and more.
You and yours have a very Merry Christmas, and a blessed new yr.
(I think it was Floyd lol)
Peace.
Sherwin Williams gave me a gallon of Pro-999 at cost to try out. Was one of the worst products I've ever used. Maybe 10% better than using nothing at all.
Hi are you recording with a go pro?
No I have one just not familiar enough with it. I have posted a few videos with it
Just finished one like this. Used Gardz (two coats).... not so much. The drywall paper had separated internally when the panelling was pulled. The result? Blisters, blisters, blisters. Had to cut them out and actually tape over a bunch of them. Would have been better off to just pull the drywall and replace it. Tuition paid.
How's a finisher never heard of gardz
I fixed a lot of torn drywall paper
And you never heard of gardz until then?
Gardz isn't the same product it was 15 years ago. I personally think Shellac aka sanding sealer works better. Gardz don't hold the paper down as well
Are you using a setting mud, an all purpose mud, or something else, over the sealer on the damaged areas?? Does it matter which mud goes over the sealer? I'd been using dewaxed shellac but will give this a try if it's cheaper...
+3 from USG but it doesn't matter
That was one zinger of a video.....I'm about to do the same thing
"I haven't felt this good in years"
Hey Ray how's it going hope you had a good Thanksgiving. I've used that stuff a few times works great.
#drywall
I have the same scenario like you have. I applied gardz then waited 3 hours then sand it then I applied the All Purpose. But I started to seeing bubbles :(
Did I do something wrong?
no some times that happens and you need to spot coat the bubbles