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Rich February 24th 08 09:53 PM

Plaster walls
 
Hi,

Another quantry in my 80 year old house. 2 of my rooms were left in
their original plaster state with many crack repairs having been done
over the years. They are also uninsulated to the exterior...I am
itching to either rip out the plaster, insulate and drywall. I know
this is opening a can of worms, but what tips or suggestions does
anyone have to make the job seem a little more do-able as a DIYer?

Thanks for your help.


RBM[_2_] February 24th 08 10:19 PM

Plaster walls
 

"Rich" wrote in message
...
Hi,

Another quantry in my 80 year old house. 2 of my rooms were left in
their original plaster state with many crack repairs having been done
over the years. They are also uninsulated to the exterior...I am
itching to either rip out the plaster, insulate and drywall. I know
this is opening a can of worms, but what tips or suggestions does
anyone have to make the job seem a little more do-able as a DIYer?

Thanks for your help.


Sheetrocking is cheap. The labor is in the demo. If you can demo the rooms,
even one at a time. save all the trim if it's in good shape, insulate, then
hire sheetrockers and tapers to do the drywall, then finish the trim
yourself, it'll be worth it. A horsehair plaster job is going to be over an
inch thick, so window and door trims will need some extra work, but the
rooms will be suddenly much larger. It's also a good opertunity to install
new wiring.




Rich February 25th 08 03:06 PM

Plaster walls
 
Those are all good points...thanks.


On Feb 24, 5:19*pm, "RBM" wrote:
"Rich" wrote in message

...

Hi,


Another quantry in my 80 year old house. * 2 of my rooms were left in
their original plaster state with many crack repairs having been done
over the years. *They are also uninsulated to the exterior...I am
itching to either rip out the plaster, insulate and drywall. *I know
this is opening a can of worms, but what tips or suggestions does
anyone have to make the job seem a little more do-able as a DIYer?


Thanks for your help.


Sheetrocking is cheap. The labor is in the demo. If you can demo the rooms,
even one at a time. save all the trim if it's in good shape, insulate, then
hire sheetrockers and tapers to do the drywall, then finish the trim
yourself, it'll be worth it. A horsehair plaster job is going to be over an
inch thick, so window and door trims will need some extra work, but the
rooms will be suddenly much larger. It's also a good opertunity to install
new wiring.




Matthew Dunphy February 25th 08 04:27 PM

Plaster walls
 
On Feb 24, 4:53 pm, Rich wrote:
Hi,

Another quantry in my 80 year old house. 2 of my rooms were left in
their original plaster state with many crack repairs having been done
over the years. They are also uninsulated to the exterior...I am
itching to either rip out the plaster, insulate and drywall. I know
this is opening a can of worms, but what tips or suggestions does
anyone have to make the job seem a little more do-able as a DIYer?

Thanks for your help.


Taking down the old plaster walls & ceiling in my similarly aged
house
was a pleasure. If you don't already have em, pick up ventilators
for
anyone who'll be helping out, or your lungs will hate you.

It's going to be a very dirty job, dress appropriately, and make sure
that the room is empty of stuff with appearances you value. If
you can't move everything, get some 6 mil and cover up what's left.

Our demolition was essentially hammers and brute force. I assume
you already have safety glasses :) Heavy duty black trash bags are
also in order, as plaster gets heavy. Some kind of gloves are good
too, assuming you've got wood lathe & nails behind that plaster.

While you've got the walls off, consider any upgrades you can do.
Plan, plan, plan. We rewired the entire first floor (2nd floor is
getting
similar treatment in a few months) and I put speaker cable access
in the living room, so that one can easily set up a surround system
regardless of what side of the room you choose to put your TV in.

Good luck!

Heathcliff February 25th 08 04:48 PM

Plaster walls
 
On Feb 24, 3:53 pm, Rich wrote:
Hi,

Another quantry in my 80 year old house. 2 of my rooms were left in
their original plaster state with many crack repairs having been done
over the years. They are also uninsulated to the exterior...I am
itching to either rip out the plaster, insulate and drywall. I know
this is opening a can of worms, but what tips or suggestions does
anyone have to make the job seem a little more do-able as a DIYer?

Thanks for your help.


One thing I noticed when moving from a new house to an older one with
plaster walls was that the house was considerably quieter. Those
plaster walls transmit less sound. If you decide to take out the
plaster, you might consider having it replaced with a double layer of
drywall to make up the extra thickness, and provide more mass for
soundproofing. -- H


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