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-   -   render or bonding plaster to smooth off reveals priop to drylining... (https://www.diybanter.com/uk-diy/74587-render-bonding-plaster-smooth-off-reveals-priop-drylining.html)

Tom Dixon October 25th 04 07:01 PM

render or bonding plaster to smooth off reveals priop to drylining...
 
Currently dry-lining my old cottage, rubble / masonry walls. For most
of the walls I am putting insulation against wall held in place by
stud-work. However I need to glue / fix 20 mm insulation board and
plaster board directly onto the uneven reveals, and my feeling is that
they are sufficiently uneven that I need to smooth them off, to offer
a good surface to accept insultion etc. to provice a good level
finish. I was going to render, but having never plastered I'm not sure
what bonding plaster is good for - would this be useful stuff to
smooth off surface and bond with the insulation board? Any advice out
there?

Cheers, Tom

Andrew Gabriel October 25th 04 09:23 PM

In article ,
(Tom Dixon) writes:
Currently dry-lining my old cottage, rubble / masonry walls. For most
of the walls I am putting insulation against wall held in place by
stud-work. However I need to glue / fix 20 mm insulation board and
plaster board directly onto the uneven reveals, and my feeling is that
they are sufficiently uneven that I need to smooth them off, to offer
a good surface to accept insultion etc. to provice a good level
finish. I was going to render, but having never plastered I'm not sure
what bonding plaster is good for - would this be useful stuff to
smooth off surface and bond with the insulation board? Any advice out
there?


Bonding plaster is a plaster undercoat that also sticks well to
almost everything (tools in particular;-). You should be able to
get it smooth, although not smooth as finish coat as it contains
some larger pieces (which would also mean it wouldn't work in a
thin layer).

However, it isn't waterproof. It will sock up water, and prolonged
or repeated exposure causes it to fall apart. If you want something
which will survive in the presence of damp, then you should use sand
and cement with a waterproofer. You could also add a small amount of
exterior/waterproof PVA into the mix.

I don't have a completely clear picture of what you are doing, so
I'm not sure if this is helpful or not.

--
Andrew Gabriel

chris French October 25th 04 11:36 PM

In message , Andrew Gabriel
writes
In article ,
(Tom Dixon) writes:
Currently dry-lining my old cottage, rubble / masonry walls. For most
of the walls I am putting insulation against wall held in place by
stud-work. However I need to glue / fix 20 mm insulation board and
plaster board directly onto the uneven reveals, and my feeling is that
they are sufficiently uneven that I need to smooth them off, to offer
a good surface to accept insultion etc. to provice a good level
finish.


Bonding plaster is a plaster undercoat that also sticks well to
almost everything (tools in particular;-). You should be able to
get it smooth, although not smooth as finish coat as it contains
some larger pieces (which would also mean it wouldn't work in a
thin layer).

However, it isn't waterproof. It will sock up water, and prolonged
or repeated exposure causes it to fall apart. If you want something
which will survive in the presence of damp, then you should use sand
and cement with a waterproofer. You could also add a small amount of
exterior/waterproof PVA into the mix.

I don't have a completely clear picture of what you are doing, so
I'm not sure if this is helpful or not.

I read it that the OP wants to smooth off the internal window reveals
enough so that they can stick the insulation /plasterboard to it.

I would have thought bonding would be fine here, but I'd probably use
sand /cement
--
Chris French, Leeds

Tom Dixon October 26th 04 02:11 PM

chris French wrote in message ...
In message , Andrew Gabriel
writes
In article ,
(Tom Dixon) writes:
Currently dry-lining my old cottage, rubble / masonry walls. For most
of the walls I am putting insulation against wall held in place by
stud-work. However I need to glue / fix 20 mm insulation board and
plaster board directly onto the uneven reveals, and my feeling is that
they are sufficiently uneven that I need to smooth them off, to offer
a good surface to accept insultion etc. to provice a good level
finish.


Bonding plaster is a plaster undercoat that also sticks well to
almost everything (tools in particular;-). You should be able to
get it smooth, although not smooth as finish coat as it contains
some larger pieces (which would also mean it wouldn't work in a
thin layer).

However, it isn't waterproof. It will sock up water, and prolonged
or repeated exposure causes it to fall apart. If you want something
which will survive in the presence of damp, then you should use sand
and cement with a waterproofer. You could also add a small amount of
exterior/waterproof PVA into the mix.

I don't have a completely clear picture of what you are doing, so
I'm not sure if this is helpful or not.

I read it that the OP wants to smooth off the internal window reveals
enough so that they can stick the insulation /plasterboard to it.

I would have thought bonding would be fine here, but I'd probably use
sand /cement



Sorry if my original post wasn't clear - last post had it right, and
I've decided to go with a render. Thanks for replies and advice - Tom


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