Another great video Ben. If I could give a word of advice, don't be so hyper aware of the critics while filming videos. I follow many home repair channels and I see that the most popular ones get attacked the most. I'm not fully certain, but my gut feeling is that there's a certain subset of seasoned professionals who absolutely do not like seeing these skills being taught to DIYers. These types do not like regular homeowners knowing these skills and want them to be dependent upon the pros. Especially the shadier ones. So my take is they are overly critical on purpose just to discourage helpful youtube content. Keep doing what you're doing and worry less about the critics in the comment section. Know that you're efforts are appreciated by 99% of the silent viewers.
I don't think Ben worries too much about what the critics say. I think he addresses it in the videos so that other viewers don't get too drawn into the debate. By acknowledging that there different approaches or philosophies it gives him a chance to state why he does things the way he does.
@@tay13666 It wasn't just today's video, but I've noticed it for several videos in a row. I could be wrong, but my guess is that he's over thinking the critics and it sometimes affects the quality of his work where he's focused on critical comments rather than explaining it to the audience and then some mistakes are made that he then goes backs and corrects. Not saying I'm right, but it's a hunch.
@@robertgiresi9515 You have a good point. Though, as seasoned finishers, sometimes our mind wanders because it's a rather repetitious task. Add to that, making a tutorial video Ben may have so many thoughts going through his mind. Whether he's concerned with negative feedback or not his mistakes give him the perfect opportunity to show how to remedy them. All the best to you.
@@shongo2k15 Thanks. Nice to get good perspective from a seasoned finisher. BTW, I'm not a seasoned finisher or anywhere close. I'm a home DIYer looking to learn how to hang drywall, finish work and repair work. Not someone looking to do this for a living, just someone looking for self reliance skills to do work on my own home.
I feel like there's also older pros who are just real adamant and stubborn about their ways being the "ONLY" way to do things. You run into them a lot on the real world, especially when it comes to newer technology and methods, etc. Probably plenty of both in the comments war zones.
Yeah, absolutely agree with this. Always like watching your vidz and this was good to see from a slightly different take by teaching those guys in Whistler. Envious of that drive up there on the sea to sky highway, it's one of the world's most stunning drives.
Very helpful Ben. Nice of you to take time as a consultant to help other teams. Shared knowledge is power. Essentially you helped put food on other guys' family tables.
I'm so glad I found your channel. You are really helping me understand how to do home repairs and giving me the confidence to try some of these repairs that my 1970 house is needing!!
Man your videos are priceless! Been redoing my attached garage that was a rental before we bought this place, so it’s old and in rough shape, your tips and tricks have really helped me start my process, a process of something I’ve never done before, and you’ve helped substantially, right up to me figuring out from your video today that all my corner beads have failed because they to were all ‘clenched’ on. So I’ve been scraping, rescrewing and re mudding! Thanks again! Keep it up!
This style of teaching is fine. I learned just as much on this as your other videos. As to my motivation for watching this I have two large horizontal corner edges that have failed similar to one you showed here. You just saved me the time I would have spent papering over the flange on drywall area I imagined I’d need to do. Thanks!
Yes. This morning I installed a drywall patch in a bathroom ceiling around the ventilation fan replacement. This was very helpful as I have larger cracks around some of the perimeter. Just sent you some pics from this morning. Looking forward to revisiting previous videos for how to use quickset with glue. I now also check my blades for curvature. New skills for me. Thanks.
just what I was looking for brother! I'm working through some foundation damages at one of our properties and there's been a fair amount of cracking in the drywalls. I've been watching your content & learning for years my man, I can't thank you enough! 🙏
Amazing work your videos are so entertaining also being so fun to watch and also very helpful for when I have an issue with my drywall. Keep up the amazing work Ben.
As per usual, great video. I never get tired of learning from excellent work. I know you have been saying it for awhile now, but I enjoy hearing your signoff; very nicely personal, even though you don’t know me or most of your audience personally. Thank you!
GREAT video stumbled on it, love the format with the before and after. I too have had failures from wrinkage in the shrinkle, I get to go back to customers places for other jobs and I often check my previous work. I have found places where the tape was not flat , ( no prefill ) and you can see tiny wrinkles. I do the painting as well, so that finished product is very important to me. Thanks for posting !!
Informative as always Ben Shout out to the business that hired you for training, that shows they care enough to want to learn proper technique and pass that workmanship onto their customer. 👍
I felt like I should have to pay you now. I definitely felt like I was in a class. Doesn't matter what it is, you always have informative videos, and you always teach in an easily digestible way. Not many people can do that. 👊
Ben is by far my favorite - just a humble and relatable guy who is extremely knowledgeable. Keep it up Ben!!! You've got a real fan in the U.S. Pacific Northwest....
This is the first time, ever, that I have commented on a RUclips video. Your videos are super helpful and beneficial to me. My wife will ask me what I am doing, then she will hear your voice from the video and say, "Its okay, as long as you're watching the Vancouver Carpenter!" She knows I am learning good stuff! Thank you!
Great video as usual, thank you. I’ve been hanging drywall for 17 years and now learning how to tape and do small repairs. I always enjoy your videos and how useful they are. My daughter change my profile picture by the way 😅
Doing a job that needed to be drylined. So looked at utube and your channel seemed by far the best chanel. Did the first coat and tape today on ceiling and walls. To my knowledge no blisters but will see tomorrow. I'm 63 now still looking to learn. Many thanks for you videos.
I'll be taping and finishing my garage soon and this was the most helpful video I've seen yet on the mixing and application of mud and what tape to use. Thanks for being such a great instructor.
I'm glad you included what the veteran critics would say because it shows the purpose, longer term benefit of the longer route and application. I could watch these videos all day. So much fun.
Excellent video! I'm a DIYer the way I dealt with cracks in my drywall was to just replace the sheetrock in whatever area I found cracks. I was replacing all the trim and adding crown anyways so I felt this was my best solution. However, now that I'm mostly done with my walls should I ever experience a Crack in my walls from this point forward I will be using what I've learned in this video! So I want to thank you so much!
Excellent video! I have watched it multiple times and taken notes beside. Fixing 3 cracks is part of a 3 room project so the temptation is to get the cracks patched and move on. However your detail makes it plain that doing it right will make it last longer. Thanks a bunch.
Extremely interesting and informative, as always, thank you! I especially enjoy the bonus content, like the VC vocab words of the day (flange, clinching), and who doesn't love a fun game of joint tape peek-a-boo!
Love watching your videos! I’ve been in commercial work in SF Bay Area for 33 years and taping for 37 years! Always learning new things from different taping backgrounds. Keep up the great videos.
I am a bit of a DIYer. I got quoted to mud my basement for 50 bucks an hour. I said nah. I don't even make that much. I came across your mudding videos and it all turned out great. Really appreciate your time and patience in the videos.
good stuff. I have two stress cracks in my den, one above and one below a window, and I have stress cracks in the corner bead of my dining room, but on the ceiling portion. I haven't seen you do one of those, but it can't be all that different. These types of videos sure do come in handy. thx!
Nicely done…again! Thanks! I like how you look to understand the process/product and why it would/wouldn’t work. That’s how I work … I appreciate your videos and time.
Wow. I think you're on to something here. Watching you teach others was educational & entertaining. Although, I already knew most of what you taught cuz well I've taken many of your courses. Professor VC. Love it!
Agreeded. The paper tape and paper bead have always proven to be stronger with far less fails related to the Sheetrock itself. Structural issues will always defeat sheetrock. Thanks for the video 👍
I am working a 48” x 70” ceiling panel with all of those issues on the joints, seasonal temperature changes, water damage, and in too many spots, ring-shank nails that bent and just bashed in, cratering the drywall around the nails. 20 linear feet around the replaced panel and another 10 feet of crumbled joints. I sistered furring strips on the ceiling joists to get a better screwing surface. I wish I had known about adding PVA glue to the Easy Sand 45 before I prefilled the joints. I did brush and vacuum all of the joints before I pre-filled, so I am hoping it will hold. Thanks for post all of this content. I am a lot more confident this repair will work.
Great video! I just did a crack, I used a glazing bar to scrape back mud. The back end of the bar with the 90 deg part is designed to be used as a scraper. Not sure what the difference is between fast set, and confill but I taped it with fibafuse, and confill. I also put a bunch of screws, and scraped just wide enough to make sure tape is below the surface. Never seen that bead crimp, good to know. Thanks for doing good quality work.
Love that paint scraper idea, I'd always wondered about a good way to embed the tape deeper so that the repair could extend out less and create less work!
love to see professionals teach great lessons.. you will always get comments, tons of trolls looking to sharpshoot folks from their chairs. You are definitely a tradecraft specialist and amazing skills. thanks.
I liked the last few videos because they were about garage quality repairs. I like this one because it’s a in home quality repair. Get out all the bad and ugly then do the repair. It can be tough sometimes to remove bad like you did with the corner bead because “it looked okay”.
I came on here to look for repairing stress cracks in drywall (VERY common in California due to E.Q's). I searched for it hoping to find a video by you, Ben (KNOWING you would have one out there in cyber space)! There it was! The perfect video. Thank you, again. You have been such a help to me in the drywall end of construction.
Thank you for this video. Me and my wife are redoing our home and your video has been by far the most useful one on how to fix settlement cracks. Thank you.
Ormond Beach Florida here! Thank you for being a teaching professional. Now, I know what to look for as I am watching my local dry wall contractors who claim to have a professional skill set.
Thx Ben, great vid, & definitely learned a new trick; that will be using for a repair of my own. Appreciate as always, & thx for making us better. Cheers✌🏻
Just saying thanks again for sharing your knowledge. What I consider the hardest trade to master, drywall finishing. I can do an acceptable home install or repair after 50 years thanks to your you tube channel.
You are the best teacher! I have been following you for years great work! You've helped me broaden my scope of work for people in an industry where there isn't very many people anymore around here.
I agree M V. He's a really good teacher. I recently shared with him that although I am not a drywall professional and have absolutely never done jobs for others. I simply started remodeling my home a year ago. And now, I can do drywall pretty good. My partners company saw my work and they were so impressed that they threw out some notions about hiring me. And I owe it all to Ben. He is a great teacher but even more, awesome at his craft. However, I must add, that one's gotta have the touch for mudding too. (LOL).
@@Cindy25Cox that's awesome! Yes Ben is awesome. I was able to learn how to use a trowel from him as well and got myself a nice 13x5 Marshalltown flat trowel. The way he teaches is really detailed and articulate and I'm able to apply his methods with great success. Even skim coating for clients and have ran into the bubbles etc. Love this channel!
I was just looking at a job today that is exactly like this. One length of corner bead actually fell off the ceiling and a bunch more was cracked the same way as in your demo. There was no sign of mechanical fastener in the corner bead and I was thinking what kind of drywaller does not fasten the corner bead. I'll have to look at it when I return, but I'm pretty sure the corner bead must have been clinched on. And I bet it all would have survived the earthquake had it been screwed or stapled on. Cool seeing you teach on video while teaching a group in person. Double teaching!! Two for the money.
Thx, I'm doing a repair between plaster and drywall in a new addition. Thanks for the tips. I did it like this last time but not with glue or quick set. I'll see if this one lasts longer! I think you missed one popped/ bulging screw towards the right.
Have you ever thought about becoming a college instructor? For a 'drywallery carpenter' guy you sure are good at what you do. It's great that you share your knowledge and experience here.
This was a fantastic video! Great info. I have 2 stress cracks just like that in my 20yr old home and now I feel I can handle it. Would you do anything differently if the corner bead is bull nose? That’s my home has bell nose popping in several spots. Thanks again, love you channel!
Thank you! I just bought a house, I appreciate the way you explain the science and reasons for the way this works. I have these things on my walls...They look like someone stood inside the wall and pushed their hand into the room against a rubber membrane, it is nearly 3/8" above the surface. some are rippled, & they are not all on seams. I would be more confident cutting into them to repair if I knew what caused them. Thanks for any insights!! ps. I'm in Michigan if you want to come fix it 😉
I was skeptical about reapplying mud to my cracked corners that I installed tape on, and I did the entire room before really watching any drywall videos. The corners were so bad and the tape applied with so little mud that while notching out my Vs, most of the tape just fell off without much effort. I had to just laugh about it. I've watched so many drywalling videos since then, that I am pretty confident that I could repair or install drywall in an entire house. I doubt I could do it at the same speed as professionals, but I would make it look professional! Vancouver Carpenter videos has been my training guide for all of the skills I have now. This was another great video, that I took a lot of good information from. Keep up the good work!
Did an entire house with just the advice from Vancouver Carpenter vids. It's not perfect and took a loong time but my corners are better than any local drywal installer. These vids provide enough to become a professional drywaller.
Nice job and good info! I'm rehabbing an old cabin with the worst drywall ever. I'm going to have to do a heavy knockdown to get it to be somewhat presentable. I wonder just how much can be hidden with heavy texture?
Thanks for the video! Love the channel. After about 3 months of watching, I became a better finisher than the pros that were working on my project. Had to go back and fix all their mistakes. Question on prefilling you did here.....why not embed the tape at the end of the prefill so it gets sucked in slightly and fuses into that really strong joint? My thought was that it would be even stronger with the paper laminated on that deep prefill layer and with a little shrinkage into the joint, you would have more room for finish mud on top of the paper. thanks for the feedback!
I always use a clincher. It pushes the corner bead tight to the rock. It will not hold on light weight rock but does the job on regular rock. I can say I have never had a failure. I tried nailing screwing the corner bead but if you hit the bead it will dent or screwing it will bend the bead. I always use speed set on the first coat and never had a failure of the bead getting loose. On long runs when I need to butt two pieces together the clincher does a perfect job joining the pieces together. It turns out flawless.
Another great video Ben. If I could give a word of advice, don't be so hyper aware of the critics while filming videos. I follow many home repair channels and I see that the most popular ones get attacked the most. I'm not fully certain, but my gut feeling is that there's a certain subset of seasoned professionals who absolutely do not like seeing these skills being taught to DIYers. These types do not like regular homeowners knowing these skills and want them to be dependent upon the pros. Especially the shadier ones. So my take is they are overly critical on purpose just to discourage helpful youtube content. Keep doing what you're doing and worry less about the critics in the comment section. Know that you're efforts are appreciated by 99% of the silent viewers.
I don't think Ben worries too much about what the critics say. I think he addresses it in the videos so that other viewers don't get too drawn into the debate. By acknowledging that there different approaches or philosophies it gives him a chance to state why he does things the way he does.
@@tay13666 It wasn't just today's video, but I've noticed it for several videos in a row. I could be wrong, but my guess is that he's over thinking the critics and it sometimes affects the quality of his work where he's focused on critical comments rather than explaining it to the audience and then some mistakes are made that he then goes backs and corrects. Not saying I'm right, but it's a hunch.
@@robertgiresi9515
You have a good point.
Though, as seasoned finishers, sometimes our mind wanders because it's a rather repetitious task. Add to that, making a tutorial video Ben may have so many thoughts going through his mind. Whether he's concerned with negative feedback or not his mistakes give him the perfect opportunity to show how to remedy them. All the best to you.
@@shongo2k15 Thanks. Nice to get good perspective from a seasoned finisher. BTW, I'm not a seasoned finisher or anywhere close. I'm a home DIYer looking to learn how to hang drywall, finish work and repair work. Not someone looking to do this for a living, just someone looking for self reliance skills to do work on my own home.
I feel like there's also older pros who are just real adamant and stubborn about their ways being the "ONLY" way to do things. You run into them a lot on the real world, especially when it comes to newer technology and methods, etc. Probably plenty of both in the comments war zones.
With over 37 years in the trade, I give your channel my seal of approval, probably the only legit drywall channel I've seen on youtube.
always love your videos. but seeing you like this really shows how well you know your craft and that you are a really good teacher
Thank you!
100% - this was actually a really good format for you. Enjoyed the change of pace.
Yeah, absolutely agree with this. Always like watching your vidz and this was good to see from a slightly different take by teaching those guys in Whistler. Envious of that drive up there on the sea to sky highway, it's one of the world's most stunning drives.
I can’t believe I can be riveted to someone drywalling for 25 minutes, but I always learn so much from your videos. Great job as always, Ben.
Your videos are always welcoming and informative. Thanks for all your struggles setting up equipment to teach and refresh us DIYers.
Very helpful Ben. Nice of you to take time as a consultant to help other teams. Shared knowledge is power. Essentially you helped put food on other guys' family tables.
I'm so glad I found your channel. You are really helping me understand how to do home repairs and giving me the confidence to try some of these repairs that my 1970 house is needing!!
Man your videos are priceless! Been redoing my attached garage that was a rental before we bought this place, so it’s old and in rough shape, your tips and tricks have really helped me start my process, a process of something I’ve never done before, and you’ve helped substantially, right up to me figuring out from your video today that all my corner beads have failed because they to were all ‘clenched’ on. So I’ve been scraping, rescrewing and re mudding! Thanks again! Keep it up!
Very helpful Ben! So glad your knowledge, as the "drywalliest carpenter" is being passed on!!
This style of teaching is fine. I learned just as much on this as your other videos. As to my motivation for watching this I have two large horizontal corner edges that have failed similar to one you showed here. You just saved me the time I would have spent papering over the flange on drywall area I imagined I’d need to do. Thanks!
Yes. This morning I installed a drywall patch in a bathroom ceiling around the ventilation fan replacement. This was very helpful as I have larger cracks around some of the perimeter. Just sent you some pics from this morning. Looking forward to revisiting previous videos for how to use quickset with glue. I now also check my blades for curvature. New skills for me. Thanks.
just what I was looking for brother! I'm working through some foundation damages at one of our properties and there's been a fair amount of cracking in the drywalls.
I've been watching your content & learning for years my man, I can't thank you enough! 🙏
Amazing work your videos are so entertaining also being so fun to watch and also very helpful for when I have an issue with my drywall.
Keep up the amazing work Ben.
You are a great instructor. You explain why you do what you do. You are my go to repair guy. Do it right the first time.
As per usual, great video. I never get tired of learning from excellent work. I know you have been saying it for awhile now, but I enjoy hearing your signoff; very nicely personal, even though you don’t know me or most of your audience personally. Thank you!
GREAT video stumbled on it, love the format with the before and after.
I too have had failures from wrinkage in the shrinkle, I get to go back to customers places for other jobs and I often check my previous work. I have found places where the tape was not flat , ( no prefill ) and you can see tiny wrinkles.
I do the painting as well, so that finished product is very important to me.
Thanks for posting !!
Informative as always Ben
Shout out to the business that hired you for training, that shows they care enough to want to learn proper technique and pass that workmanship onto their customer. 👍
I felt like I should have to pay you now. I definitely felt like I was in a class. Doesn't matter what it is, you always have informative videos, and you always teach in an easily digestible way. Not many people can do that. 👊
Ben is by far my favorite - just a humble and relatable guy who is extremely knowledgeable. Keep it up Ben!!! You've got a real fan in the U.S. Pacific Northwest....
This is the first time, ever, that I have commented on a RUclips video. Your videos are super helpful and beneficial to me. My wife will ask me what I am doing, then she will hear your voice from the video and say, "Its okay, as long as you're watching the Vancouver Carpenter!" She knows I am learning good stuff! Thank you!
Just don't tell her about the hot female anime videos. Shhh.
Thank you Ben for sharing. Great video mate. You explain and demonstrate the procedures very well. Cheers from a land down under 🇦🇺.
Great video as usual, thank you. I’ve been hanging drywall for 17 years and now learning how to tape and do small repairs. I always enjoy your videos and how useful they are. My daughter change my profile picture by the way 😅
Doing a job that needed to be drylined. So looked at utube and your channel seemed by far the best chanel. Did the first coat and tape today on ceiling and walls. To my knowledge no blisters but will see tomorrow. I'm 63 now still looking to learn. Many thanks for you videos.
I'll be taping and finishing my garage soon and this was the most helpful video I've seen yet on the mixing and application of mud and what tape to use. Thanks for being such a great instructor.
I so appreciate watching and learning from a true pro who is way more intelligent than the average pro. Thank you for your great content.
I'm glad you included what the veteran critics would say because it shows the purpose, longer term benefit of the longer route and application. I could watch these videos all day. So much fun.
Excellent video! I'm a DIYer the way I dealt with cracks in my drywall was to just replace the sheetrock in whatever area I found cracks. I was replacing all the trim and adding crown anyways so I felt this was my best solution. However, now that I'm mostly done with my walls should I ever experience a Crack in my walls from this point forward I will be using what I've learned in this video! So I want to thank you so much!
Glad I found your channel I have been recently having to do more mud work and your video has really helped me step it up and take on more. Thank you
I've finished my house with your guidance almost 18 months ago...
And I am still watching
Excellent video! I have watched it multiple times and taken notes beside. Fixing 3 cracks is part of a 3 room project so the temptation is to get the cracks patched and move on. However your detail makes it plain that doing it right will make it last longer. Thanks a bunch.
The greatest drywall mud man in the world . His work is speechless and extraordinary.
Loved the format of this one!
This guy is truly born to teach and guide. Clean, balanced, perfectly detailed presentation. Also, just right amount of joking.
Man, you're the drywall master of the whole RUclips. I love you Man, you're the best.😘
Root cause, settling! I always relieve the friction between adjoining surfaces. Well done Nate!
Extremely interesting and informative, as always, thank you! I especially enjoy the bonus content, like the VC vocab words of the day (flange, clinching), and who doesn't love a fun game of joint tape peek-a-boo!
Love watching your videos! I’ve been in commercial work in SF Bay Area for 33 years and taping for 37 years! Always learning new things from different taping backgrounds. Keep up the great videos.
What company do you work for?
😂 Love the tongue-tied! Great video!
I am a bit of a DIYer. I got quoted to mud my basement for 50 bucks an hour. I said nah. I don't even make that much. I came across your mudding videos and it all turned out great. Really appreciate your time and patience in the videos.
good stuff. I have two stress cracks in my den, one above and one below a window, and I have stress cracks in the corner bead of my dining room, but on the ceiling portion. I haven't seen you do one of those, but it can't be all that different. These types of videos sure do come in handy. thx!
I really loved this format. Felt like I was there with you teaching me.
Nicely done…again!
Thanks!
I like how you look to understand the process/product and why it would/wouldn’t work. That’s how I work … I appreciate your videos and time.
Well done Ben! Always learn something when watching.
Wow. I think you're on to something here. Watching you teach others was educational & entertaining. Although, I already knew most of what you taught cuz well I've taken many of your courses. Professor VC. Love it!
Thanks Cindy!!!!
I second this! I loved the format and how well it was presented.
Agreeded. The paper tape and paper bead have always proven to be stronger with far less fails related to the Sheetrock itself. Structural issues will always defeat sheetrock.
Thanks for the video 👍
I started watching you three years ago to try to work up the knowledge and courage to fix my cracked corners. Still working up to it. Thanks.
Me too❤
Great video and tips. Followed them and just completed a patch/repair.
Anyone who criticizes your expertise is just jealous of your excellent work. Your the only guy I watch when it comes to drywall. Ty very much
Awesome craftsmanship ! I enjoy and appreciate your educational content !
I am working a 48” x 70” ceiling panel with all of those issues on the joints, seasonal temperature changes, water damage, and in too many spots, ring-shank nails that bent and just bashed in, cratering the drywall around the nails. 20 linear feet around the replaced panel and another 10 feet of crumbled joints.
I sistered furring strips on the ceiling joists to get a better screwing surface. I wish I had known about adding PVA glue to the Easy Sand 45 before I prefilled the joints. I did brush and vacuum all of the joints before I pre-filled, so I am hoping it will hold.
Thanks for post all of this content. I am a lot more confident this repair will work.
Great video! I just did a crack, I used a glazing bar to scrape back mud. The back end of the bar with the 90 deg part is designed to be used as a scraper. Not sure what the difference is between fast set, and confill but I taped it with fibafuse, and confill. I also put a bunch of screws, and scraped just wide enough to make sure tape is below the surface.
Never seen that bead crimp, good to know.
Thanks for doing good quality work.
Love that paint scraper idea, I'd always wondered about a good way to embed the tape deeper so that the repair could extend out less and create less work!
Really well done!!... I think the presentation was spot on.... thank you
love to see professionals teach great lessons.. you will always get comments, tons of trolls looking to sharpshoot folks from their chairs. You are definitely a tradecraft specialist and amazing skills. thanks.
I like this format just as well as you talking to the camera.
Thank you! That was extremely well articulated and detailed! Much appreciated!
You are amazing! You definitely deserve your own show on the HGTV channel
I liked the last few videos because they were about garage quality repairs. I like this one because it’s a in home quality repair. Get out all the bad and ugly then do the repair. It can be tough sometimes to remove bad like you did with the corner bead because “it looked okay”.
I came on here to look for repairing stress cracks in drywall (VERY common in California due to E.Q's). I searched for it hoping to find a video by you, Ben (KNOWING you would have one out there in cyber space)! There it was! The perfect video.
Thank you, again. You have been such a help to me in the drywall end of construction.
Hadn't thought about stress cracks where earthquakes are more common. That must be frustrating.
Thank you for this video. Me and my wife are redoing our home and your video has been by far the most useful one on how to fix settlement cracks. Thank you.
Glad it helped
that paper thing, it worked for many years, i have it done on a wall, by a repair guy many years ago. Great vids.
Ormond Beach Florida here! Thank you for being a teaching professional. Now, I know what to look for as I am watching my local dry wall contractors who claim to have a professional skill set.
Thx Ben, great vid, & definitely learned a new trick; that will be using for a repair of my own.
Appreciate as always, & thx for making us better.
Cheers✌🏻
Just saying thanks again for sharing your knowledge. What I consider the hardest trade to master, drywall finishing. I can do an acceptable home install or repair after 50 years thanks to your you tube channel.
Perfect timing, had my foundation raised and have a ceiling to wall crack, this helped!
You are a really great teacher. I've learned so much (completely inexperienced with anything to do with fixing anything lol)
I really enjoyed this video. I felt like I was the student standing there getting the training and it seems like you just flowing better
"Rinkage" is probably the most Canadian thing you've ever said on this channel. Love it
You are the best teacher! I have been following you for years great work! You've helped me broaden my scope of work for people in an industry where there isn't very many people anymore around here.
Wow, thank you!
I agree M V. He's a really good teacher. I recently shared with him that although I am not a drywall professional and have absolutely never done jobs for others. I simply started remodeling my home a year ago. And now, I can do drywall pretty good. My partners company saw my work and they were so impressed that they threw out some notions about hiring me. And I owe it all to Ben. He is a great teacher but even more, awesome at his craft. However, I must add, that one's gotta have the touch for mudding too. (LOL).
@@Cindy25Cox that's awesome! Yes Ben is awesome. I was able to learn how to use a trowel from him as well and got myself a nice 13x5 Marshalltown flat trowel. The way he teaches is really detailed and articulate and I'm able to apply his methods with great success. Even skim coating for clients and have ran into the bubbles etc. Love this channel!
@@MV-wb2cz Man do I hear you. My exact thoughts. I truly enjoy his channel. And the bonus we get with his humor. Can't go wrong.
@@MV-wb2cz Oh and I forgot to congratulate you on the trowel. Bravo!!
I have three vertical cracks similar to this above my windows and patio door. This video was very helpful.
I was just looking at a job today that is exactly like this. One length of corner bead actually fell off the ceiling and a bunch more was cracked the same way as in your demo. There was no sign of mechanical fastener in the corner bead and I was thinking what kind of drywaller does not fasten the corner bead. I'll have to look at it when I return, but I'm pretty sure the corner bead must have been clinched on. And I bet it all would have survived the earthquake had it been screwed or stapled on. Cool seeing you teach on video while teaching a group in person. Double teaching!! Two for the money.
This is one of your most valuable videos! Thanks!
Your outro is always appreciated 👍🏽💪🏽
Thx, I'm doing a repair between plaster and drywall in a new addition. Thanks for the tips. I did it like this last time but not with glue or quick set. I'll see if this one lasts longer! I think you missed one popped/ bulging screw towards the right.
I like this format and I feel like there was so much info jamedy into this which I liked 👍
Have you ever thought about becoming a college instructor? For a 'drywallery carpenter' guy you sure are good at what you do. It's great that you share your knowledge and experience here.
Best explanation for paper tape and shear that ive heard
This was a fantastic video! Great info. I have 2 stress cracks just like that in my 20yr old home and now I feel I can handle it. Would you do anything differently if the corner bead is bull nose? That’s my home has bell nose popping in several spots. Thanks again, love you channel!
Thank you! I just bought a house, I appreciate the way you explain the science and reasons for the way this works. I have these things on my walls...They look like someone stood inside the wall and pushed their hand into the room against a rubber membrane, it is nearly 3/8" above the surface. some are rippled, & they are not all on seams. I would be more confident cutting into them to repair if I knew what caused them. Thanks for any insights!!
ps. I'm in Michigan if you want to come fix it 😉
Nice work! I have a couple settlement cracks I need to fix, including inside corner tape that has torn.
This video is a high level dive. Thank you!
Excellent tutorial.
Thx you explained this really well and I think I can do this as a woman that knows NOTHING about mud & drywall! Thanks for thoroughly explaining!!!!!
thanks videos are golden for those who want to try themselves and cannot get a contractor in my area
I love your videos. Im learning a ton, thanks !
I was skeptical about reapplying mud to my cracked corners that I installed tape on, and I did the entire room before really watching any drywall videos. The corners were so bad and the tape applied with so little mud that while notching out my Vs, most of the tape just fell off without much effort. I had to just laugh about it. I've watched so many drywalling videos since then, that I am pretty confident that I could repair or install drywall in an entire house. I doubt I could do it at the same speed as professionals, but I would make it look professional! Vancouver Carpenter videos has been my training guide for all of the skills I have now. This was another great video, that I took a lot of good information from. Keep up the good work!
Did an entire house with just the advice from Vancouver Carpenter vids. It's not perfect and took a loong time but my corners are better than any local drywal installer. These vids provide enough to become a professional drywaller.
Just subscribed. Your channel is very educational.
Thanks you for the videos.
Well done. Clear and concise.
Nice job and good info! I'm rehabbing an old cabin with the worst drywall ever. I'm going to have to do a heavy knockdown to get it to be somewhat presentable. I wonder just how much can be hidden with heavy texture?
Thank you for great info.
Great information, bro. This is super helpful
BEN, ANOTHER GREAT VIDEO!!!!!! THANKS...
Thanks for the video! Love the channel. After about 3 months of watching, I became a better finisher than the pros that were working on my project. Had to go back and fix all their mistakes. Question on prefilling you did here.....why not embed the tape at the end of the prefill so it gets sucked in slightly and fuses into that really strong joint? My thought was that it would be even stronger with the paper laminated on that deep prefill layer and with a little shrinkage into the joint, you would have more room for finish mud on top of the paper. thanks for the feedback!
I actually liked this format...it seemed more informative.
Thank you and great work as usual.
Wish I had your videos years ago. Thank you.
Enjoyed your video! What type of glue did you mix in with the quickset?
I always use a clincher. It pushes the corner bead tight to the rock. It will not hold on light weight rock but does the job on regular rock. I can say I have never had a failure. I tried nailing screwing the corner bead but if you hit the bead it will dent or screwing it will bend the bead. I always use speed set on the first coat and never had a failure of the bead getting loose. On long runs when I need to butt two pieces together the clincher does a perfect job joining the pieces together. It turns out flawless.
Excellent video Ben!
I love this style of video too!
As I can say is those are 3 quite lucky gentlemen to get to watch the master at work!!