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dpb dpb is offline
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Default primer for re-painting old plaster?

On 12/30/2015 10:38 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
On Wednesday, December 30, 2015 at 11:00:30 AM UTC-5, Eagle wrote:
FrozenNorth pretended :

....

I worked in California, so there are no basements to speak of, and most
of the interior plaster walls are 2'X4' 1/2" wall board with metal mesh
used in inside corners and fiberglass tape on joints. Gypsum plaster is
spread over that lath and when cured and dry, "puttycoat" is spread
over the gypsum resulting in a very hard wall.


I have very similar walls in my 1956-era house in the northeast US. The
"2'X4' 1/2" wall board" that you mention is gypsum board, laid
perpendicular to the studs (i.e. horizontal).

The insides of the walls look similar to this, although my gypsum boards
are 6" (8"?) wide, not 2'. I'm not sure about the length. It's been a while
since I tore any walls down, so the exact width and length of the gypsum
board has been forgotten, but I'm confident that it is not 2', not even
1' wide.

http://inspectapedia.com/interiors/P...Board31DFs.jpg

My walls measure about 3/4" thick. The metal mesh in the corners and
at the ceiling junctions make certain types of repairs and/or renovations
a real PITA. Patches in the open field need to be shimmed out to become
flush with the rest of the wall/ceiling.


"Plaster lath" system...

www.tsib.org/pdf/technical/70-101-Gypsum-Lath-Behind-Gypsum-Plaster.pdf

We used it quite a lot doing reno's of the old Federal-era mansions in
Lynchburg, VA, back when a young pup and were refurb'ing many of these
with friends moving in just out of school. They had been converted to
rooms and terribly cut up an all, but one could get a whole lot of house
for almost nothing as compared to new construction if one was willing to
do the necessary refurbishing. We as a group of new hires (roughly 1000
over about three years) basically did a major revitalization of a
significant area in older part of Lynchburg.

There were about a half-dozen of us who made the renovation business a
sideline occupation serving the purpose. I mostly concentrated on the
interior architectural woodwork but these systems were used extensively
as opposed to original lath and plaster as faster and cheaper but still
able to match surface thicknesses and such that were extremely variable
in those old houses.

They were 16" systems then as the above mentions; I never ran into
anything narrower than that; I suppose there were likely local
manufacturers as well with other products.

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