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cowen70

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New to the forum. Good place, been lurking for a while but that damn post viewing limit got me in the end so I signed up.

I am relatively new to plastering. Got into it when I went around to the grandparents to redecorate, pulled a bit of paper off the wall and the entire wall came with it. Admittedly we hadn't really paid attention and the grandfather was a bodge it merchant, anything needed fixing whack a bit of bodge in it (or bitumen if he had any to hand!). Not only did the walls come off, the floors had woodworm and there was damp front and back. Replaced the floors, doors, window frames (mostly because they were old and crap in the window frames case), pulled off polystyrene ceiling tiles and the ceiling went too! And on and on and on...good job I'd been made redundant a few weeks before. Never been so busy being unemployed.

Got a friend in helping us and he plastered the walls...without fixing the damp. You know what happened next? Course you do.

And so began my love affair with plastering. Started studying, learnt very quickly to investigate the problem. Needed pointing front and back, used dryzone to install a damp course, found out that dodgy guttering people had just had water pooling at the foundations so we fixed the guttering and repointed the lower floors where the mortar was rotten after sucking up all that water.

And here I am, going onto level 2 diploma in plastering (2.5 days a week for a year). I know it is a tough industry and it seems like it is barely recovered but as a family we'll be buying and selling a few properties as time goes on and renting out a few if we find good ones (got a couple going already, plastering will definitely come in handy if we get more dodgy tenants laying a hammer out around the living room like last year). Strange thing was before this house I couldn't put a wall plug in, you learn fast when you have too I guess.

Already learned distressingly that I basically can't touch that wall I've tanked for probably 4-10 months after plastering? Ouch. But good to know, the forum has come in very handy.
 
New to the forum. Good place, been lurking for a while but that damn post viewing limit got me in the end so I signed up.

I am relatively new to plastering. Got into it when I went around to the grandparents to redecorate, pulled a bit of paper off the wall and the entire wall came with it. Admittedly we hadn't really paid attention and the grandfather was a bodge it merchant, anything needed fixing whack a bit of bodge in it (or bitumen if he had any to hand!). Not only did the walls come off, the floors had woodworm and there was damp front and back. Replaced the floors, doors, window frames (mostly because they were old and crap in the window frames case), pulled off polystyrene ceiling tiles and the ceiling went too! And on and on and on...good job I'd been made redundant a few weeks before. Never been so busy being unemployed.

Got a friend in helping us and he plastered the walls...without fixing the damp. You know what happened next? Course you do.

And so began my love affair with plastering. Started studying, learnt very quickly to investigate the problem. Needed pointing front and back, used dryzone to install a damp course, found out that dodgy guttering people had just had water pooling at the foundations so we fixed the guttering and repointed the lower floors where the mortar was rotten after sucking up all that water.

And here I am, going onto level 2 diploma in plastering (2.5 days a week for a year). I know it is a tough industry and it seems like it is barely recovered but as a family we'll be buying and selling a few properties as time goes on and renting out a few if we find good ones (got a couple going already, plastering will definitely come in handy if we get more dodgy tenants laying a hammer out around the living room like last year). Strange thing was before this house I couldn't put a wall plug in, you learn fast when you have too I guess.

Already learned distressingly that I basically can't touch that wall I've tanked for probably 4-10 months after plastering? Ouch. But good to know, the forum has come in very handy.

Nicely done great intro!

Welcome bud..


You can paint the tanked walls with contract matt paint, it allows the moisture to escape as it doesn't contain any vinyl

Stick around :D
 
Thanks all for the welcome.

And thank you Spanky at least we can leave the walls white for them, it is definitely better than nothing! And thank god we didn't paper it before I read the forum.
 
Welcome along bud :RpS_thumbsup: now that's what I call an intro....I've got goosebumps reading that. Good job
 
Welcome mate great first post, where in the world are you?, Im guessing its not Yorkshire otherwise you'd of already of told us.:RpS_thumbup:
 
I'm in the North East, Newcastle specifically.

So it's a good job the forum is text based otherwise you'd never understand a bloody word I say :D
 
Nicely done great intro!

Welcome bud..


You can paint the tanked walls with contract matt paint, it allows the moisture to escape as it doesn't contain any vinyl

Stick around :D

Hey man quick question if that is OK I'd appreciate it.

So the back of the house was damped, tanked and finished and we put some matt paint on as you said. Seems fine. Finally getting around to the front of the house that has also had the damp course put in and the pointing/guttering looked at.

Stupidly we'd plastered and papered it not knowing what we were doing and the paper bubbled up like some white fluffy stuff and a bit of black salt/something coming through just like the back. Paper came off in seconds as you would expect. Unlilke the front though the plaster is solid as a rock. Do you think it still needs to come off and get tanked or is it possible that it was just some moisture coming through but not enough to damage the plaster? Thinking to whack some paint on and get away with not doing it. I mean I will but there are other jobs waiting :) not just a lazy git (and its free gratis! Family and all that, but its been 2 months!)
 
Hey man quick question if that is OK I'd appreciate it.

So the back of the house was damped, tanked and finished and we put some matt paint on as you said. Seems fine. Finally getting around to the front of the house that has also had the damp course put in and the pointing/guttering looked at.

Stupidly we'd plastered and papered it not knowing what we were doing and the paper bubbled up like some white fluffy stuff and a bit of black salt/something coming through just like the back. Paper came off in seconds as you would expect. Unlilke the front though the plaster is solid as a rock. Do you think it still needs to come off and get tanked or is it possible that it was just some moisture coming through but not enough to damage the plaster? Thinking to whack some paint on and get away with not doing it. I mean I will but there are other jobs waiting :) not just a lazy git (and its free gratis! Family and all that, but its been 2 months!)

Anyone will tell you bud that when doing any damp course it's advisable to do the entire ground floor including internal walls..
 
Got to strip the plaster off that is on even if it is still solid to the walls? As it happens on the wall I am on about we did the two connecting internal walls as well.
 
Hi cowen im cullercoats way my self , welcome . Yeah it needs to come off and be rendered with sand cement and renderguard included in the water . Its all part in parcel of the dryzone system
 
And Ive just realised, think I was half asleep last night or just plain stupid, I haven't internally dryzoned there.Balls. New job this weekend then.
 
Hi cowen im cullercoats way my self , welcome . Yeah it needs to come off and be rendered with sand cement and renderguard included in the water . Its all part in parcel of the dryzone system

You don't drive a grey van by any chance? Good to know there is a local bloke on the forums, currently living in wallsend and training up in TMC benton (start again september). Cheers for the advice. I'm on it today.
 
You don't drive a grey van by any chance? Good to know there is a local bloke on the forums, currently living in wallsend and training up in TMC benton (start again september). Cheers for the advice. I'm on it today.

na big white van with CT Plastering stamped across the top of both sides, im up wallsend abit like . Builder pal lives up that way :RpS_thumbup:
 
Any other questions in the future give me a pm or sumthing , think u may have to get ur post number up a it first though , or worst case search for ct plastering on net and give me a ring :RpS_thumbup:
 
Yeah they have a construction place up in Forest Hall Benton Industrial estate opposite Asda, guy teaching the course is a Joe Black. Actually come to think of it sure I've seen your van around. I do appreciate the offer of help and advice it'll definitely come in handy. Dare I say you ever need a labourer the experience would come in handy and I'm a hard worker :) (never hurts to try).
 
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