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#1
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I did something unusual for me. . . . Actually read the paint can
before priming my newly installed drywall. It says I should wait 30 days for the wall to cure. I've never done that and never had a problem. I've always just waited for the shade of moisture to disappear from the mud and then painted. Never have had a problem with wear or cohesion. What am I missing? Dennis |
#2
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Dennis wrote:
I did something unusual for me. . . . Actually read the paint can before priming my newly installed drywall. It says I should wait 30 days for the wall to cure. I've never done that and never had a problem. I've always just waited for the shade of moisture to disappear from the mud and then painted. Never have had a problem with wear or cohesion. What am I missing? Dennis The fact that a lawyer wrote the warning??? Lou |
#3
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On Oct 7, 10:07*am, (Dennis) wrote:
I did something unusual for me. . . . *Actually read the paint can before priming my newly installed drywall. * *It says I should wait 30 days for the wall to cure. * I've never done that and never had a problem. * I've always just waited for the shade of moisture to disappear from the mud and then painted. * Never have had a problem with wear or cohesion. * What am I missing? Dennis I've never waited that long either with good results even when I used the heavy (green pail) mud. Run a dehumidifier in the room for 5 days if not sure. |
#4
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Dennis wrote:
I did something unusual for me. . . . Actually read the paint can before priming my newly installed drywall. It says I should wait 30 days for the wall to cure. I've never done that and never had a problem. I've always just waited for the shade of moisture to disappear from the mud and then painted. Never have had a problem with wear or cohesion. What am I missing? Dennis I've seen standard 30 day cure advice for new plaster and masonry. Is this a latex primer specifically for new drywall? Oil base? Brand? |
#5
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![]() "Dennis" wrote in message ... I did something unusual for me. . . . Actually read the paint can before priming my newly installed drywall. It says I should wait 30 days for the wall to cure. I've never done that and never had a problem. I've always just waited for the shade of moisture to disappear from the mud and then painted. Never have had a problem with wear or cohesion. What am I missing? Dennis I have never had a problem where regular, pre-mixed mud was used. I have experienced some minor problems when the setting type mud was used. I suspect that a wait time for that is advisable. For sure I know you need to let new plaster cure. Maybe not the full 30 but at least 14 days of dry air. Colbyt |
#6
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On Oct 7, 10:07*am, (Dennis) wrote:
I did something unusual for me. . . . *Actually read the paint can before priming my newly installed drywall. * *It says I should wait 30 days for the wall to cure. * I've never done that and never had a problem. * I've always just waited for the shade of moisture to disappear from the mud and then painted. * Never have had a problem with wear or cohesion. * What am I missing? Dennis If mud is thoroughly dry go for it, maybe less than a day , depends on temp-humidity conditions. 30 days is for real plaster and concrete not USG drywall compound. |
#7
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On Tue, 07 Oct 2008 11:10:36 -0400, LouB wrote:
Dennis wrote: I did something unusual for me. . . . Actually read the paint can before priming my newly installed drywall. It says I should wait 30 days for the wall to cure. I've never done that and never had a problem. I've always just waited for the shade of moisture to disappear from the mud and then painted. Never have had a problem with wear or cohesion. What am I missing? Dennis The fact that a lawyer wrote the warning??? Lou That was my first guess. |
#8
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On Tue, 07 Oct 2008 12:50:05 -0400, Norminn
wrote: Dennis wrote: I did something unusual for me. . . . Actually read the paint can before priming my newly installed drywall. It says I should wait 30 days for the wall to cure. I've never done that and never had a problem. I've always just waited for the shade of moisture to disappear from the mud and then painted. Never have had a problem with wear or cohesion. What am I missing? Dennis I've seen standard 30 day cure advice for new plaster and masonry. Is this a latex primer specifically for new drywall? Oil base? Brand? PVA latex drywall primer from Ace Hardware |
#9
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Since my experience on and off for 25 years tells me not to worry
about it, and others have similar experience, that's what I'll do. I'll wait a couple days for good measure. Thanks, All. Dennis |
#10
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If it's been sanded, and smoothed, then it's dry enough to paint.
s "Dennis" wrote in message ... I did something unusual for me. . . . Actually read the paint can before priming my newly installed drywall. It says I should wait 30 days for the wall to cure. I've never done that and never had a problem. I've always just waited for the shade of moisture to disappear from the mud and then painted. Never have had a problem with wear or cohesion. What am I missing? Dennis |
#11
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