DIY Home Improvement Forum banner
1 - 3 of 22 Posts

· Not so new
Joined
·
970 Posts
Hmmm...definitly the lift. Rent is probably the best option as you're only looking at a couple hundred sf of ceiling.

The banjo and such? I dont think I'd buy them. Seems to me, for one guy, it wouldnt save as much time as you think. Dont do as much drywall as I'd like so I could be wrong.

IMHO...when I walk into a house thats 172 years old I expect to see a wave hear and there. Sags are something else and need to be dealt with.
I think people make to much of the finshing process. I dont think I've ever walked up to a wall and said "Dude, I can see your butt joint". :laughing: Point is nobody looks. Do your best, paint it and move on.
 

· Not so new
Joined
·
970 Posts
Sorry, 12penny, my e-mail gets to me two DAYS after posting......Earthlink.
When I use hot (chemical or setting type vs. air drying, regular) mud, I need to get as much coverage as possible for that smaller job visit. I use paper tape on everything, with both muds because it's stronger and will cover a crack underneath better than fiber mesh tape.http://www.usg.com/rc/technical-articles/drywall-finishing-technical-guide-en-J1190.pdf

http://www.usg.com/rc/data-submitta...tapes-industrial-construction-data-MH1178.pdf
So I wanted a time-saver in applying paper tape with hot mud rather than mix, apply mud, apply tape, apply more mud. I use a plastic tray combo by cutting this down the center: http://www.harborfreight.com/multipurpose-tool-tray-92229.html
The two smaller leave joined, melt a slit with a soldering gun at the bottom sides of one and one end of the second. The paper tape roll sits in one, feeds through the slot below through both slots in the other. Add hot mud to the top already mixed loose pancake consistency in the empty tray, pull tape through; it wets the side that goes to the wall/ceiling before applying. I pull 25-35’ through, layering it on another box tray I attach to my belt at my side, on top of itself so no dry spots (wet to wet like wallpaper). Go to ceiling with 6” knife (trowel) in one hand, stick tape, pull tight with other hand at arms reach to snap-it on drywall, move another arms reach, snap again, etc, cut end with blade, do another joint, etc., then wipe with blade to seat tape-never air bubbles because of mud consistency and coverage from going through trough. The other long tray has a wooden block in the bottom (inverted “V” shaped like the corner bead, keeps the mud from under it) with slots melted for the angle of the outside papered bead. Pull the c.b. through, stick on corner, quick smooth, apply top coat of hot mud, second coat, then drying mud. The two-tray fits in a 5 gal. bucket to easily clean with a car wash brush, long stiff bristles to reach the corners. This is instead of banjo…….. You save the first mud applying step with trowel. Your arm is ½ as tired, get more work done in same time.

Do you need home-made zip poles to contain the dust……….

Gary
I've seen guys do something similar, only as I remember they used a small cardboard box.

I have a basement remodel coming up in a couple weeks and I'll be sure to give a go. For 3.99 its worth a shot.

Thanks Gary
 
1 - 3 of 22 Posts
This is an older thread, you may not receive a response, and could be reviving an old thread. Please consider creating a new thread.
Top