Pointmaster, any reviews? - Pointing tools/aid
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If its the yellow tube with the plunger then I would say its ok.
It's great for short joints like perps or between kerbs on a curve but I would not like to use it to grout a patio.
Getting the mix right is essential, a soft sand (kiln dried works well)with some plasticiser.
Keep shaking the tube and wiggle the plunger as you go.
In some situations it makes jointing bearable in others it's back to the trowel and jointer.
The other ones which are like a mastic gun are total S**** unless you like a face full of squit.
It's great for short joints like perps or between kerbs on a curve but I would not like to use it to grout a patio.
Getting the mix right is essential, a soft sand (kiln dried works well)with some plasticiser.
Keep shaking the tube and wiggle the plunger as you go.
In some situations it makes jointing bearable in others it's back to the trowel and jointer.
The other ones which are like a mastic gun are total S**** unless you like a face full of squit.
Cheers
Lemoncurd
Lemoncurd
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Maybe it's the easipoint stuff that makes a difference.. Never used it, where'd you get it from? No one sells it around here.lutonlagerlout wrote:different strokes for different folks lemoncurd
i pointed 180M2 in 2 days with the mastic type gun and easipoint
those plunger ones dont work for me,I have one in the lock up
cheers LLL
And importantly how much does it comes it cost.
Cheers
Lemoncurd
Lemoncurd
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about £20 a bag which covers around 7-10m2 of 12 mm joints in indian stone
i have tried many pointing methods but the one that does not work is trying to put soft sand mortar through the pointing gun
we have used plastering sand on the advice of pink paving and that works well with a bit of feb in the mix
with large areas we have 1 knocking up,1 squirting (me) and 1 striking around 15minutes later
cheers LLL
i have tried many pointing methods but the one that does not work is trying to put soft sand mortar through the pointing gun
we have used plastering sand on the advice of pink paving and that works well with a bit of feb in the mix
with large areas we have 1 knocking up,1 squirting (me) and 1 striking around 15minutes later
cheers LLL
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Never been a fan of gun-injection, but I know it works for some contractors.
As others have mentioned, it's not so much the tool as the mortar that is critical. It needs to avoid separation and it *must* flow freely, which means it needs good plasticisers, which is the secret ingredient behind EasyPoint, FlowCem, et al.
I know I've said this before but I get at least a dozen emails a year from some keen DIYer who has 'invented' a revolutionary new pointing system which turns out to be....a glorified mastic gun.
As others have mentioned, it's not so much the tool as the mortar that is critical. It needs to avoid separation and it *must* flow freely, which means it needs good plasticisers, which is the secret ingredient behind EasyPoint, FlowCem, et al.
I know I've said this before but I get at least a dozen emails a year from some keen DIYer who has 'invented' a revolutionary new pointing system which turns out to be....a glorified mastic gun.
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