Sealing new plaster
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i should add hes 6'4" 14 stone basketball player and boxer haha
Giles
Groundworks and Equestrian specialists, prestige new builds and sports pitches. High Peak, Cheshire, South Yorkshire area.
http://www.gbgroundworks.com
Groundworks and Equestrian specialists, prestige new builds and sports pitches. High Peak, Cheshire, South Yorkshire area.
http://www.gbgroundworks.com
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Think I must have seen over a 100 bits of this kit some of it looking brand new must have bought them on the strength of that contract. It's Carrillion the main contractor on it
Giles
Groundworks and Equestrian specialists, prestige new builds and sports pitches. High Peak, Cheshire, South Yorkshire area.
http://www.gbgroundworks.com
Groundworks and Equestrian specialists, prestige new builds and sports pitches. High Peak, Cheshire, South Yorkshire area.
http://www.gbgroundworks.com
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i was in his yard 7 years ago giles and he had untold plant then,i think the reason they use him is that he has so much kit and drivers
it would drive me nuts working on it,i know lads who are getting £10 an hour labouring 10 hr shifts 7 days a week but not my cuppa tea
In 1984 me and my mate went to JCT 10 for the start it was big money then £48 for a 12 hr day 7 days a week,not bad when beer was £1 a pint!
LLL
it would drive me nuts working on it,i know lads who are getting £10 an hour labouring 10 hr shifts 7 days a week but not my cuppa tea
In 1984 me and my mate went to JCT 10 for the start it was big money then £48 for a 12 hr day 7 days a week,not bad when beer was £1 a pint!
LLL
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The sizing of freshly plastered walls is done to control the suction. Without this, the new paint will dry too quickly, preventing proper polymerization of the binder (resin/varnish content). This will cause cracking and flakin.g in the future- no matter how many coats you add on top. It can also cause 'piling' of pigment and resin sludge on the rollers and bits of the roller sticking to the wall.
PVA is not the best way to do it. As stated by previous posts, the best way is to put a coat of watered down emulsion. If it is fully plastered (new bonding coat and finising coat, use 80% cheap paint, 20% water. If it is just a thin skim of finishing plaster, 10% water is fine.
Cheap paint still needs watered down- even though the pigment content is lower, it should still (hopefully) have been formulated with drying rate tested (its a huge factor in paint formulation). Remember- paint doesnt just dry- it sets chemically which it cannot do properly without water.
On a side note- when plastering, if the plaster is given a final dry polish with the trowel (coupla hours after final wet polish), theoretically, sizing is not necessary- but who wants to chance that?
Bet thats more than you cared to know about it! I worked for 12 years in a lab for a pigment manufacturer (paints, inks, plastics and cement sometimes I even bore myself!
-Michael.
PVA is not the best way to do it. As stated by previous posts, the best way is to put a coat of watered down emulsion. If it is fully plastered (new bonding coat and finising coat, use 80% cheap paint, 20% water. If it is just a thin skim of finishing plaster, 10% water is fine.
Cheap paint still needs watered down- even though the pigment content is lower, it should still (hopefully) have been formulated with drying rate tested (its a huge factor in paint formulation). Remember- paint doesnt just dry- it sets chemically which it cannot do properly without water.
On a side note- when plastering, if the plaster is given a final dry polish with the trowel (coupla hours after final wet polish), theoretically, sizing is not necessary- but who wants to chance that?
Bet thats more than you cared to know about it! I worked for 12 years in a lab for a pigment manufacturer (paints, inks, plastics and cement sometimes I even bore myself!
-Michael.
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LOL- Ive not done the job for a few years- took my voluntary dunny money and went self employed. The company was CIBA, there are a few sites down south, certainly at least one that deals with dyes.
We were strictly pigments only. Dyes dissolve, Pigments are insoluble, instead they are ground and dispersed- never dissolved.
It still bugs me when people use the term cement 'dyes' (even the manufacturers) when in fact they are cement pigments. But its one of those anorak moments where I have learned to bite my tongue.
Still- yet another british manufacturing industry in very steep decline. Glad I got out when I did.
-Michael.
We were strictly pigments only. Dyes dissolve, Pigments are insoluble, instead they are ground and dispersed- never dissolved.
It still bugs me when people use the term cement 'dyes' (even the manufacturers) when in fact they are cement pigments. But its one of those anorak moments where I have learned to bite my tongue.
Still- yet another british manufacturing industry in very steep decline. Glad I got out when I did.
-Michael.
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Im frustrated that my 3 year old keeps calling screws 'nails'. I seriously need a new labourer- his wheelbarrow capacity is woeful too
Another couple that seem to get peoples backs up on this forum...
-Calling 22mm tiles - "slabs"
-Referring to concrete as "cement"
Had a labourer that kept calling the manual Tamper the "Tamperer" (bit worrying).
And lastly, a mate talking about an annoyance said he'd had enough and it was "time to nip this thing in the butt!"
-Michael.
Another couple that seem to get peoples backs up on this forum...
-Calling 22mm tiles - "slabs"
-Referring to concrete as "cement"
Had a labourer that kept calling the manual Tamper the "Tamperer" (bit worrying).
And lastly, a mate talking about an annoyance said he'd had enough and it was "time to nip this thing in the butt!"
-Michael.
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