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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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sm_jamieson wrote:
On 31 Jan, 20:00, "Phil L" wrote: 2) get a coat of plaster on the entire wall, don't bother about any marks, lines or anything else, just make sure the entire surface is covered fairly evenly (even as in the same thickness - don't have it a mm in one part and half an inch thick elsewhere, unless this is unavoidable.) Of course, this, in my experience is the hard part. Polishing and stuff is easy, but if you can't judge flatness at this stage (or on any second coat - but I've never seen a pro doing plasterboard skim in 2 coats), the later stages will not correct it. You can only shove the plaster around later to correct a certain amount of wobbliness. You can remove localised dips, scrapes etc later, but if the initial flatness is not close enough, you have a problem. And this is where I got stuck. The first coat is primarily to fill any deep undulations...this is allowed to partially set before the 2nd coat is applied - yes, some parts of it may be 12mm thick while others are only 2-3mm, but the wall would have to be seriously rough for this to be the case, thick artex for example. PB doesn't always need 2 coats - most pros give it 2 coats because it's easier to get a final finish, but if it's the only patch they're doing, they may just do it in one - if they are doing a full house or a few rooms, everything gets 2 coats because you have more time, IE you can first coat 2 walls, then with the next mix, second coat those and put 1st coat on a third, then trowel up the first two and your next mix will second coat the third and maybe get another wall first coated etc - in this scenario, doing it in one isn't really an option because it goes off too quick and your meterage is severely curtailed, inthat you can plaster one or two walls, then you can't mix again until they are completely polished up. 3) have a brew, wash your trowel, bucket etc and clean the mixing bucket 4) 10 mins later, do another mix, half the size as the first mix. 5) apply this t-h-i-n-l-y over the now partially set first coat, you are only really using the new mix to fill any hollows and you will see that it is much smoother already than the first coat. Again, I find its the large scale lack of flatness that is the problem. If a hollow is smaller than the trowel, no problem. Any it's easy to push too much plaster away so that you create undulations in the direction of the trowel. You can to be able to "feel" flatness under your trowel. And I have found no magic trick to help with this. I'm not following this? - are you mixing the plaster too stiff? - it should have a pouring consistency....I can't think of anything in everyday life that I could use as a comparison - certainly not as thick as ready mixed polyfilla or tile adhesive, it should be able to drip....the only good beginners tip I can give you on mixing is to have clean water to start with, then sprinkle the powder in either by hand or by using a scoop...it will disappear below the water surface until there is enough powder that no water appears on the surface, then start mixing, either with a stick or a whisk |
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