Bond It Failed

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Stupid boy.
Serves you right working on a Saturday!
Bloody peasant!!
It was necessary. The great man is up this weekend interfering. He been up on the top floor f**k**g about putting six tiles on and installing a shower and making a mess.

Hes been at it two days and hed have begrudge me 3 hrs

I bet I have to mop up after him too.

Maybe hell stop complaining about his day rate bill after this
 
It was necessary. The great man is up this weekend interfering. He been up on the top floor f**k**g about putting six tiles on and installing a shower and making a mess.

Hes been at it two days and hed have begrudge me 3 hrs

I bet I have to mop up after him too.

Maybe hell stop complaining about his day rate bill after this
He'll not hell you over corrective knob head.
 
You're obviously absolutely right of course Chris. Steve will without a shadow of a doubt have distemper. It's stealing random dogs that has led to the problem.
Now that's not fair.

There's a difference between stealing dogs and refusing to pay for one.

I've been very proactive in rescuing dogs but I've never deprived anyone of their dog.

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Someone wants to sell me this for a hundred quid. I told her to come back when shes giving him away because so long as theres one homeless dog in donegal I'll not be paying one penny for a dog.

It's a matter of principle
 
Now that's not fair.

There's a difference between stealing dogs and refusing to pay for one.

I've been very proactive in rescuing dogs but I've never deprived anyone of their dog.

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Someone wants to sell me this for a hundred quid. I told her to come back when shes giving him away because so long as theres one homeless dog in donegal I'll not be paying one penny for a dog.

It's a matter of principle
Pay the woman you tight c**t. And then give the dog to a good home.
 
Reminds of that joke.

paddy’s in the army and the sergeant major says to him, Oi paddy!! I didn’t see you at the camouflage training last night!! And Paddy replies...Aw thank you Sarge!!
 
Reminds of that joke.

paddy’s in the army and the sergeant major says to him, Oi paddy!! I didn’t see you at the camouflage training last night!! And Paddy replies...Aw thank you Sarge!!
He's been headhunted by the "Dublin men" they know a gombeen when they see one.
 
Premier diamond products , model PCP125

Ah, good stuff.
For lighter weight substrate prep, the wallpaper perforators can scabble well.

There's a roller type and a puck type version.

But that premier products one are mustard. I think I saw them at a show polishing and exposing concrete.
 
"Anybody seen Steve" is the cry on any job he's ever been on, his nickname is "the invisible man".
Sergeant William's used to call me morph. Whenever there was any work to do I'd disappear through the floorboards.
 
Ah, good stuff.
For lighter weight substrate prep, the wallpaper perforators can scabble well.

There's a roller type and a puck type version.

But that premier products one are mustard. I think I saw them at a show polishing and exposing concrete.
That's one of the reasons I bought it. I'm into concrete, brutalist art etc and looking to do some concrete polishing with it, but f**k yes it's great for taking paint off walls for rendering.
 
Sergeant William's used to call me morph. Whenever there was any work to do I'd disappear through the floorboards.

Sergeant William's is the dude in the leather hat, I s**t you not. Oh how I wish we'd known he was into amdram when we were in Germany. Up goes the curtain and theres all the gremlins from the squadron on the front row, come to show their support for the beloved sergeant.

Dont know why he kept it quiet.


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I was taught to scratch it up in the 90s.

Did a bit a couple of years ago with a firm and saw the lads weren't doing that any more. When I asked, they said same. Moisture could get behind the paint and cause all sorts of problems
Exactly my thinking
 
I've peeled bond-it off of glossy walls before, one of the reasons I went back to PVA (also bought a scabbler for roughing gloss which is immense)

Premier diamond products , model PCP125

Considering getting a scabbler next year - there are quite a few machines on the market, to choose from. I've been looking at the Metabo RFEV 19-125 RT.

I'm sure the PCP125 is a decent machine, but is there a specific reason why you chose it, instead of something like the Metabo?
 
Considering getting a scabbler next year - there are quite a few machines on the market, to choose from. I've been looking at the Metabo RFEV 19-125 RT.

I'm sure the PCP125 is a decent machine, but is there a specific reason why you chose it, instead of something like the Metabo?
It was just a good deal at the time. I don't know anything about the others, but I've been using pcp for a few months now and it oozes quality. The ease with which it takes paint off is remarkable. In fact you have to watch you don't go too deep it's so brutal, but you soon get the hang of it.
 
It was just a good deal at the time. I don't know anything about the others, but I've been using pcp for a few months now and it oozes quality. The ease with which it takes paint off is remarkable. In fact you have to watch you don't go too deep it's so brutal, but you soon get the hang of it.

Thanks, I will look into the PCP a bit deeper. It looks quite generic, so I don't know who actually manufactures it. Refina rebadge a similar machine (I don't recall if Eibenstock make that model), and I know similar machines are commonly used with diamond cups and trolley attachments, for concrete floor resurfacing. Festool offer one, for example.

Do you find the handle design makes it difficult to handle/maneuver the machine on walls/ceilings? The handles look quite distant from the business end, so I would anticipate (perhaps wrongly) that it might be difficult to prevent it tipping and skidding this way and that.
 
Thanks, I will look into the PCP a bit deeper. It looks quite generic, so I don't know who actually manufactures it. Refina rebadge a similar machine (I don't recall if Eibenstock make that model), and I know similar machines are commonly used with diamond cups and trolley attachments, for concrete floor resurfacing. Festool offer one, for example.

Do you find the handle design makes it difficult to handle/maneuver the machine on walls/ceilings? The handles look quite distant from the business end, so I would anticipate (perhaps wrongly) that it might be difficult to prevent it tipping and skidding this way and that.
You hold it in on wall and push slightly, it to flexes a bit like a plunger. It grips really well so doesn't skip about the place. It's hard work because you're holding something fairly heavy up in the air, but that's probably just me being a weakling.
 
You hold it in on wall and push slightly, it to flexes a bit like a plunger. It grips really well so doesn't skip about the place. It's hard work because you're holding something fairly heavy up in the air, but that's probably just me being a weakling.

The irony is that I looked into it, after I posted, and it seems PCP have discontinued supplying your machine.

It looks similar (not the same, but similar) to one of Eibenstock's machines, so some time after Christmas, I'll probably e-mail them for more info.

Cheers.
 
The irony is that I looked into it, after I posted, and it seems PCP have discontinued supplying your machine.

It looks similar (not the same, but similar) to one of Eibenstock's machines, so some time after Christmas, I'll probably e-mail them for more info.

Cheers.
No problem and knowing eibenstock it'll probably be a step up from my one.
 
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