Fat ferret
Established Member
Ah the penny drops. Never thought of doing it like that or seen anyone do it like that but actually looks easier than mitreing. Will give this a go. Thanks.
Alex_E":3rme27w7 said:I'm 23 and run my own company doing plastering and plumbing along with kitchens bathrooms etc. I have two lads working for me who are similar age and we always scribe internal joints. Admittedly with power tools as in cut a 45 with the mitre saw then cut the shape of the scribe with a jigsaw with a very fine blade in it. Then as long as we can get a decent fixing we tend to grip fil and nail gun them to the wall. But if the nail gun won't hold it then it's drilled and plugged etc.
So it's not all youngsters but maybe that's why we are stacked out till next year while others are struggling?
Zeddedhed":2yhlfszg said:It seems to be the same in other trades too - finding a plasterer who skims all the way to the floor, references from door linings (not skimming over them) and cuts out electrical boxes and cleans up after himself is a tough call indeed.
novocaine":1v2l3qx9 said:brick work wont suck up water, if it did all the bridges on canals would have fallen down years ago.
Edited to change block to brick.
Grayorm":3h1kawdb said:novocaine":3h1kawdb said:brick work wont suck up water, if it did all the bridges on canals would have fallen down years ago.
Edited to change block to brick.
Rubbish. Why do bricks burst below a damp proof line when frozen? Because the ones below the damp are sodden.
Alex_E":qd57ulgz said:I'm 23 and run my own company doing plastering and plumbing along with kitchens bathrooms etc. I have two lads working for me who are similar age and we always scribe internal joints. Admittedly with power tools as in cut a 45 with the mitre saw then cut the shape of the scribe with a jigsaw with a very fine blade in it. Then as long as we can get a decent fixing we tend to grip fil and nail gun them to the wall. But if the nail gun won't hold it then it's drilled and plugged etc.
So it's not all youngsters but maybe that's why we are stacked out till next year while others are struggling?
Zeddedhed":2hkhx16i said:I don't want to start a row here but.....
Bricks DO suck up water. Stack three or four bricks (no mortar) in a washing up bowl and pour in two inches of water. Wait half a day or so and then take a look at the 'tide mark' on the bricks.
Unless as novo says they are engineering bricks.
Or, everything I thought I knew about DPC's and brickwork is wrong (possible) and I'm a goon (true says SWIMBO)
Enter your email address to join: