To fix hole or patch section in drywall
"Roger Shoaf" wrote in message
...
"Eigenvector" wrote in message
. ..
, but surrounding the hole is mostly just drywall paper and
paint. Should I cut out around the hole and replace that section or
patch the hole and let the paint, paper, and remaining drywall take care
of
the rest?
What makes an easy patch is to cut your hole back to solid sheetrock and
square the hole. Take a piece of sheetrock cut 2 inches larger than your
hole. Now cut the paper and score the patch on une side only to the size
of
your hole.
Snap off the ends and peel the snapped off pieces from the larger sheet of
paper on the back. When you "glue" this in with the mud, (from the inside
of the wall) the surface of the patch will be slightly lower than the
surface of the wall and this makes blending in the patch real easy as you
don't need to worry about blending the bulge.
--
Roger Shoaf
About the time I had mastered getting the toothpaste back in the tube,
then
they come up with this striped stuff.
Well I'm just as well off to cut from stud to stud like the previous poster
suggested, except now that I have PEX in the walls I'm less enthusiastic
with my jab saw.
I've never tried the oversized paper trick, why not?
If I had to hang picture there or something I would replace no
question, but that's not really on the docket for me.
Second question, is joint compound/mud perfectly acceptable to use as a
dent/gouge repair for finished drywall - or is patching compound better.
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