exactly right way to do it always horizontals first for outside corners then once you have the angles set you can tape in the inside off angles to match same applys for beams with up and downs . keep em coming ray your the best!
I like the Just walk away let it dry. I say that all the time. Because if you hit it to soon you will make yourself more work in the long run. So just Walk Away
Great job Ray. Love all your videos, tips and tricks. Thin to win and walk away. Don't keep picking at the corners. LOL. That would be me when I first started finishing. Picking and picking at the corner trying to get it perfect on each coat. ✌🏼✌🏼
Diy'er here and I always did the horizontals first around the whole room when taping, then the verticals. And I start top down. Apply the same logic to corners. Laying the edges seems right. No idea if I was doing it right/wrong/official way? But made sense to me. I'm a production style person any my brain seems in tune to that "rinse & repeat" method. I'm not someone who can do a factory joint, butt joint, coat 4 screws, then another factory joint then an inside corner...I just get too lost in the process.
Ohh and on looong buckets when i do prestigious houses i use a laser to put the corner bead, on the side that is the most apparent. The good thing about the laser is you can find that bow then start from there to make your line.
I work with metal corner beads. I would start by the 135° and use 1 90° scraps to fit it properly length wise. Then i'd do the 45 degres ones and the little headders, then i'd do the vertical ones.
It's just what I like to do from my years of doing different beads with different material. I got away from straight flex years ago when I had problems with about 5 homes in one year
Have never seen a taper or drywall hanger use a level.....in 35 yrs not 1 time....I think it's DIY and people just like something to trip on when their isnt.....blow and go baby and don't make stuff more complicated.......there is plenty of complicated things in life and drywall isn't one of em!
I use the same corner bead as you do. The tape on. I have a 63 year old guy that works with me and I can not get him to switch from the old metal corner bead to the tape on. He just won't use it. Unless that's all i buy and he has no choice but he will not get it from the store himself. I guess he's an old dog that dosen't want to learn new tricks.
exactly right way to do it always horizontals first for outside corners then once you have the angles set you can tape in the inside off angles to match same applys for beams with up and downs . keep em coming ray your the best!
I like the Just walk away let it dry. I say that all the time. Because if you hit it to soon you will make yourself more work in the long run. So just Walk Away
Perfect Ray, couldn't have said it any better.
Exactly how I do it! Good work Ray
Love the new T-shirts Ray!
Awesome video! Always learning from ya Ray.
Great job Ray. Love all your videos, tips and tricks. Thin to win and walk away. Don't keep picking at the corners. LOL. That would be me when I first started finishing. Picking and picking at the corner trying to get it perfect on each coat. ✌🏼✌🏼
Thanks for the video brother definitely saving this one as well
Good audio quality and good lighting. The editing was tighter than usual. Keep doing all that.
Wow! Thank you; I learned so much!
That’s not how I woulda done it, but that’s why you’re the pro
Great Vid.. Since I went to Vinyl corner bead. Life has been much easier on the job. Now its chamfer corners they all want
Diy'er here and I always did the horizontals first around the whole room when taping, then the verticals. And I start top down. Apply the same logic to corners. Laying the edges seems right. No idea if I was doing it right/wrong/official way? But made sense to me. I'm a production style person any my brain seems in tune to that "rinse & repeat" method. I'm not someone who can do a factory joint, butt joint, coat 4 screws, then another factory joint then an inside corner...I just get too lost in the process.
Ohh and on looong buckets when i do prestigious houses i use a laser to put the corner bead, on the side that is the most apparent. The good thing about the laser is you can find that bow then start from there to make your line.
I work with metal corner beads.
I would start by the 135° and use 1 90° scraps to fit it properly length wise. Then i'd do the 45 degres ones and the little headders, then i'd do the vertical ones.
Love your videos, you've taught me so much! What'd I like to understand is WHY you use different bead for different parts on this area?
It's just what I like to do from my years of doing different beads with different material. I got away from straight flex years ago when I had problems with about 5 homes in one year
@@THEDRYWALLDOCTOR1 Thank you!
I would use the no coat you have for the off angles and sticks of no coat corner bead for the 90s
I've done that
It looks even betterer from my house !
curios, the one you do first is the one i do Last 🤣 nicce video sir
I have been doing it for 22 years that is how I do it I put no-coat on first then the outside bead and I also use the same bead
They willbe calling you back to do the ceiling lol
Just sanded it last Tuesday
Have never seen a taper or drywall hanger use a level.....in 35 yrs not 1 time....I think it's DIY and people just like something to trip on when their isnt.....blow and go baby and don't make stuff more complicated.......there is plenty of complicated things in life and drywall isn't one of em!
With the old metal bead, I've watched hangers use a laser to put it on.
I use the same corner bead as you do. The tape on. I have a 63 year old guy that works with me and I can not get him to switch from the old metal corner bead to the tape on. He just won't use it. Unless that's all i buy and he has no choice but he will not get it from the store himself. I guess he's an old dog that dosen't want to learn new tricks.
Works for me 👍👌
As long as it all has the same nose
Soffit first 😂😊🥴