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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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#1
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When I moved into my house in 1975 all the ceilings were done with polystyrene type materia.It was about the same width as a roll of wallpaper and must have came in rolls. When you look up at it looks like all the pieces of a jigsaw puzzle and it is very hard to paint if ceiling gets dirty from smoke. Does anyone know the name of this material? I would like to remove it but am afraid to start . Has anyone ever removed this and is it hard to remove. There is also polystyrene? coving round the walls as well.
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#2
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On Friday, 29 January 2021 at 08:37:48 UTC, wrote:
When I moved into my house in 1975 all the ceilings were done with polystyrene type materia.It was about the same width as a roll of wallpaper and must have came in rolls. When you look up at it looks like all the pieces of a jigsaw puzzle and it is very hard to paint if ceiling gets dirty from smoke. Does anyone know the name of this material? I would like to remove it but am afraid to start . Has anyone ever removed this and is it hard to remove. There is also polystyrene? coving round the walls as well. Our bungalow when we moved in had polystyrene coving I have removed it from all but one room so far. A good scraper easily removes the coving the harder task is removing the adhesive. With judicious water spraying I found out that the adhesive will scrape off but it needs a bit of time spent doing it. |
#3
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Derek wrote:
When I moved into my house in 1975 all the ceilings were done with polystyrene type materia.It was about the same width as a roll of wallpaper and must have came in rolls. When you look up at it looks like all the pieces of a jigsaw puzzle and it is very hard to paint if ceiling gets dirty from smoke. Does anyone know the name of this material? I would like to remove it but am afraid to start . Has anyone ever removed this and is it hard to remove. There is also polystyrene? coving round the walls as well. If you can get through the layers of paint, I suspect acetone would dissolve it, but still leave a mess such that you'd want to get it skimmed or overboard it with more plasterboard. |
#4
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On 29/01/2021 09:26, Tricky Dicky wrote:
On Friday, 29 January 2021 at 08:37:48 UTC, wrote: When I moved into my house in 1975 all the ceilings were done with polystyrene type materia.It was about the same width as a roll of wallpaper and must have came in rolls. When you look up at it looks like all the pieces of a jigsaw puzzle and it is very hard to paint if ceiling gets dirty from smoke. Does anyone know the name of this material? I would like to remove it but am afraid to start . Has anyone ever removed this and is it hard to remove. There is also polystyrene? coving round the walls as well. Our bungalow when we moved in had polystyrene coving I have removed it from all but one room so far. A good scraper easily removes the coving the harder task is removing the adhesive. With judicious water spraying I found out that the adhesive will scrape off but it needs a bit of time spent doing it. I cannot guess what the ceiling polystyrene is adhered with but it sounds like the stuff that was pasted on walls before over - papering in an effort to €śinsulate€ť the walls, if it is then likely it will have been stuck on with wallpaper paste. I have seen the rolls of very thin polystyrene (about 3mm) just stuck with normal wallpaper paste. |
#5
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On 29/01/2021 08:37, Derek wrote:
When I moved into my house in 1975 all the ceilings were done with polystyrene type materia.It was about the same width as a roll of wallpaper and must have came in rolls. When you look up at it looks like all the pieces of a jigsaw puzzle and it is very hard to paint if ceiling gets dirty from smoke. Does anyone know the name of this material? I would like to remove it but am afraid to start . Has anyone ever removed this and is it hard to remove. There is also polystyrene? coving round the walls as well. Was this polystyrene from a previous owner or was your house a new build? Polystyrene tiles and "On a Roll" were popular in the 70s/80s often in an attempt to hide cracked ceilings. It is easy to remove with a scraper but what may be more difficult is the fixing material. With luck, a polystyrene roll was probably stuck to the ceiling with a strong wall-paper paste and after scraping off the polystyrene repeated washing with water and sponge will remove the paste Tiles are often struck down with a polystyrene tile "cement" which on some ceiling surfaces can also be scraped off fairly easily - but with a lot more effort. As others have said the cement may also be water soluble. While it is a good idea to remove polystyrene from a ceiling as it is a problem if you have a fire consider also in what condition the ceiling may be underneath the polystyrene. To get a decent ceiling surface you may have to get it skimmed or over-boarded and skimmed. If the latter probably over-board the polystyrene. Where polystyrene is easy to get off I have used a 4 inch scraper https://www.screwfix.com/p/heavy-duty-scraper-4/16530 but for more difficult installations a smaller scraper can work better, especially when after removing the polystyrene the "cement" remains stuck to the ceiling. https://www.screwfix.com/p/no-nonsen...iece-set/20018. -- mailto : news {at} admac {dot} myzen {dot} co {dot} uk |
#6
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In article , Steve Walker
wrote: On 29/01/2021 09:26, Tricky Dicky wrote: On Friday, 29 January 2021 at 08:37:48 UTC, wrote: When I moved into my house in 1975 all the ceilings were done with polystyrene type materia.It was about the same width as a roll of wallpaper and must have came in rolls. When you look up at it looks like all the pieces of a jigsaw puzzle and it is very hard to paint if ceiling gets dirty from smoke. Does anyone know the name of this material? I would like to remove it but am afraid to start . Has anyone ever removed this and is it hard to remove. There is also polystyrene? coving round the walls as well. Our bungalow when we moved in had polystyrene coving I have removed it from all but one room so far. A good scraper easily removes the coving the harder task is removing the adhesive. With judicious water spraying I found out that the adhesive will scrape off but it needs a bit of time spent doing it. I cannot guess what the ceiling polystyrene is adhered with but it sounds like the stuff that was pasted on walls before over - papering in an effort to ”insulate• the walls, if it is then likely it will have been stuck on with wallpaper paste. I have seen the rolls of very thin polystyrene (about 3mm) just stuck with normal wallpaper paste. I'm sure that what I used - but it was over 40 years ago. -- from KT24 in Surrey, England "I'd rather die of exhaustion than die of boredom" Thomas Carlyle |
#7
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On 29/01/2021 09:26, Andy Burns wrote:
Derek wrote: When I moved into my house in 1975 all the ceilings were done with polystyrene type materia.It was about the same width as a roll of wallpaper and must have came in rolls. When you look up at it looks like all the pieces of a jigsaw puzzle and it is very hard to paint if ceiling gets dirty from smoke. Does anyone know the name of this material? I would like to remove it but am afraid to start . Has anyone ever removed this and is it hard to remove. There is also polystyrene? coving round the walls as well. If you can get through the layers of paint, I suspect acetone would dissolve it, but still leave a mess such that you'd want to get it skimmed or overboard it with more plasterboard. No need for any chemicals - you will be able to scrape it off irrespective of top levels of paint. Polystyrene is so weak that mechanical means that it should come off easily. The trick is to get a small area cleared first so that you can run your scraper against the original surface of the ceiling - underneath the polystyrene layer. -- mailto : news {at} admac {dot} myzen {dot} co {dot} uk |
#8
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On 29/01/2021 10:36, alan_m wrote:
On 29/01/2021 08:37, Derek wrote: When I moved into my house in 1975 all the ceilings were done with polystyrene type materia.It was about the same width as a roll of wallpaper and must have came in rolls. When you look up at it looks like all the pieces of a jigsaw puzzle and it is very hard to paint if ceiling gets dirty from smoke. Does anyone know the name of this material? I would like to remove it but am afraid to start . Has anyone ever removed this and is it hard to remove. There is also polystyrene? coving round the walls as well. Was this polystyrene from a previous owner or was your house a new build?Â* Polystyrene tiles and "On a Roll" were popular in the 70s/80s often in an attempt to hide cracked ceilings. Kotina was the brand name IIRC It is easy to remove with a scraper but what may be more difficult is the fixing material.Â* With luck, a polystyrene roll was probably stuck to the ceiling with a strong wall-paper paste and after scraping off the polystyrene repeated washing with water and sponge will remove the paste Â*Tiles are often struck down with a polystyrene tile "cement" which on some ceiling surfaces can also be scraped off fairly easily - but with a lot more effort. As others have said the cement may also be water soluble. kotina was applied with thick wallpaper paste While it is a good idea to remove polystyrene from a ceiling as it is a problem if you have a fire consider also in what condition the ceiling may be underneath the polystyrene. To get a decent ceiling surface you may have to get it skimmed or over-boarded and skimmed. If the latter probably over-board the polystyrene. Where polystyrene is easy to get off I have used a 4 inch scraper https://www.screwfix.com/p/heavy-duty-scraper-4/16530 but for more difficult installations a smaller scraper can work better, especially when after removing the polystyrene the "cement" remains stuck to the ceiling. https://www.screwfix.com/p/no-nonsen...iece-set/20018. -- Climate Change: Socialism wearing a lab coat. |
#9
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On 29/01/2021 08:37, Derek wrote:
When I moved into my house in 1975 all the ceilings were done with polystyrene type materia.It was about the same width as a roll of wallpaper and must have came in rolls. When you look up at it looks like all the pieces of a jigsaw puzzle and it is very hard to paint if ceiling gets dirty from smoke. Does anyone know the name of this material? I would like to remove it but am afraid to start . Has anyone ever removed this and is it hard to remove. There is also polystyrene? coving round the walls as well. It is almost certainly expanded polystyrene and at that vintage entirely without any kind of fire inhibitor in it. Removing it is sensible. It has almost no physical strength and will shed small spheres everywhere at the slightest provocation. You will find out why they covered the ceiling with it afterwards probably loads of cracks in the old plaster. Replastering a ceiling well is a job for experts - DIY amateurs will struggle to make it stay up. -- Regards, Martin Brown |
#10
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On 29/01/2021 10:39, charles wrote:
In article , Steve Walker wrote: On 29/01/2021 09:26, Tricky Dicky wrote: On Friday, 29 January 2021 at 08:37:48 UTC, wrote: When I moved into my house in 1975 all the ceilings were done with polystyrene type materia.It was about the same width as a roll of wallpaper and must have came in rolls. When you look up at it looks like all the pieces of a jigsaw puzzle and it is very hard to paint if ceiling gets dirty from smoke. Does anyone know the name of this material? I would like to remove it but am afraid to start . Has anyone ever removed this and is it hard to remove. There is also polystyrene? coving round the walls as well. Our bungalow when we moved in had polystyrene coving I have removed it from all but one room so far. A good scraper easily removes the coving the harder task is removing the adhesive. With judicious water spraying I found out that the adhesive will scrape off but it needs a bit of time spent doing it. I cannot guess what the ceiling polystyrene is adhered with but it sounds like the stuff that was pasted on walls before over - papering in an effort to €ťinsulate€˘ the walls, if it is then likely it will have been stuck on with wallpaper paste. I have seen the rolls of very thin polystyrene (about 3mm) just stuck with normal wallpaper paste. I'm sure that what I used - but it was over 40 years ago. Very common in the 1970's. My bedroom in a shared flat had this stuff all over the walls to 'keep out' penetrating damp during winter driving rain. And a paraffin stove for heating ... |
#11
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On 29/01/2021 08:37, Derek wrote:
When I moved into my house in 1975 all the ceilings were done with polystyrene type materia.It was about the same width as a roll of wallpaper and must have came in rolls. When you look up at it looks like all the pieces of a jigsaw puzzle and it is very hard to paint if ceiling gets dirty from smoke. Does anyone know the name of this material? I would like to remove it but am afraid to start . Has anyone ever removed this and is it hard to remove. There is also polystyrene? coving round the walls as well. just don't paint it whatever you do.... |
#13
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Yes, I remember seeing somebody show it was not flamable, it has some stuff
in it that makes it kind of shrivel up and end up like little ball bearings, but certainly we put it up with thick wallpaper paste and its still up now. Brian -- This newsgroup posting comes to you directly from... The Sofa of Brian Gaff... Blind user, so no pictures please Note this Signature is meaningless.! "Steve Walker" wrote in message ... On 29/01/2021 09:26, Tricky Dicky wrote: On Friday, 29 January 2021 at 08:37:48 UTC, wrote: When I moved into my house in 1975 all the ceilings were done with polystyrene type materia.It was about the same width as a roll of wallpaper and must have came in rolls. When you look up at it looks like all the pieces of a jigsaw puzzle and it is very hard to paint if ceiling gets dirty from smoke. Does anyone know the name of this material? I would like to remove it but am afraid to start . Has anyone ever removed this and is it hard to remove. There is also polystyrene? coving round the walls as well. Our bungalow when we moved in had polystyrene coving I have removed it from all but one room so far. A good scraper easily removes the coving the harder task is removing the adhesive. With judicious water spraying I found out that the adhesive will scrape off but it needs a bit of time spent doing it. I cannot guess what the ceiling polystyrene is adhered with but it sounds like the stuff that was pasted on walls before over - papering in an effort to "insulate" the walls, if it is then likely it will have been stuck on with wallpaper paste. I have seen the rolls of very thin polystyrene (about 3mm) just stuck with normal wallpaper paste. |
#14
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On 29/01/2021 10:50, alan_m wrote:
On 29/01/2021 09:26, Andy Burns wrote: Derek wrote: When I moved into my house in 1975 all the ceilings were done with polystyrene type materia.It was about the same width as a roll of wallpaper and must have came in rolls. When you look up at it looks like all the pieces of a jigsaw puzzle and it is very hard to paint if ceiling gets dirty from smoke. Does anyone know the name of this material? I would like to remove it but am afraid to start . Has anyone ever removed this and is it hard to remove. There is also polystyrene? coving round the walls as well. If you can get through the layers of paint, I suspect acetone would dissolve it, but still leave a mess such that you'd want to get it skimmed or overboard it with more plasterboard. No need for any chemicals - you will be able to scrape it off irrespective of top levels of paint. Polystyrene is so weak that mechanical means that it should come off easily. The trick is to get a small area cleared first so that you can run your scraper against the original surface of the ceiling - underneath the polystyrene layer. +1. 3 inch or wider flexible "filling blade" should make light work of it. (The old fashioned type with a central handle is better than the modern rectangular sort). |
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