APK Oasis

DIY drywall secrets for professional results

By Tim Carter
From pantagraph.com

DIY drywall secrets for professional results

I've been helping my son finish the basement in his 3-year-old home. We can only work on Saturdays, some Fridays and any paid days off he can spare. It's been a lifelong dream of mine to help my kids work on their homes. Five years ago I installed all the plumbing, radiant heating and electrical cables in my oldest daughter's home.

My son and I started hanging 100 sheets of drywall about a month ago. He had never done this task before and picked it up quickly.

You may have a drywall project in your future. Perhaps it's just one or two sheets. Maybe it's 30. The following tips should save you thousands of dollars. You should also experience an overwhelming feeling of satisfaction once you apply the first coat of paint to your smooth-as-silk finishing work.

The first thing to realize is hanging drywall is not finish carpentry. I've always cut my pieces ¼ or ³/8 inch less than the actual length. The drywall tape and mud will fill the small cracks you'll get at each end of a vertical piece. The long length of drywall, 8 or 12 feet, is placed perpendicular to the run of wall studs or ceiling joists.

People are also reading... Prairie Central appeals to parents for help after canceling classes over threat Suspect in Mahomet triple homicide fatally shot by police after incident in Cook Co. Former cheer coach from Normal detained for sex crimes against children Man from Normal charged with 21 felonies for sex crimes against children Chicago White Sox were 'pretty aggressive' in pursuing Mike Tauchman, who is thrilled to remain in the area Bloomington alderwoman resigns from City Council Bloomington woman detained after police said she set her apartment on fire Shooter at Illinois State pop-up party caught on video, prosecutors say Chatsworth man identified in fatal crash in Livingston County Daughter fatally shot in Mahomet tweeted about alleged killer being outside house Mother from Normal charged with her baby's death in a hot car Lifelong Access awarded $22M in state funds to renovate old Pantagraph building into service agency hub Normal man accused of trafficking cannabis from California to Illinois to sell What's open and closed on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day 2024? Chi Family Express opens dining room, bar under new name in Bloomington Ceilings are always hung first

These are the hardest pieces to do. Enlist enough help so the piece can be held tight to the ceiling joists while screws are driven to fasten the sheetrock to the joists. A mechanical lift can be rented to hold the pieces. Coarse-threaded 1 ¼-inch drywall screws with bugle-shaped heads are used for ½-inch drywall. Screws in ceilings should be placed along each edge and then 12 inches on center in the body of each sheet.

Buy a drywall screw gun

These affordable tools allow you to countersink the screw head perfectly. You want the screw head to be 1/16 inch below the surface of the drywall paper. Drive it too far, and you'll tear the paper around the screw head, reducing the holding power of the screw. Watch a few online videos showing you the proper way to drive the screws.

Outside corners require some precision. Hang the drywall so it's ¹/8 inch back from the outside corner. Do this with both pieces that form the outside corner. Doing this will make it very easy to install the corner bead. Screw spacing for drywall on walls is 16 inches on center.

Lipstick marks electrical boxes

Cutting the holes for electric boxes is tiresome if you try to measure them. It's much easier to put some cheap lipstick on the front edge of the boxes. Place the drywall at the correct height where it will be on the wall. Hold it away from the wall to avoid mis-marking the box. Press the drywall against the electrical box, transferring the lipstick to the back of the sheet. Use an inexpensive drywall punch saw to cut out the rectangle or circle. You'll get very good at this with minimal practice.

Finishing drywall is not as hard as you might think. Be sure you remove all scrap drywall from the room. Don't sweep the floors. The dust on the floors will be your friend when it's time to clean up the joint compound that falls to the floor.

Don't add much water

Brand-name ready-mixed joint compound works really well. Read the label on the bucket or box. Follow all the directions to the letter. Be sure the room is warm to accelerate drying time. Beware of adding water to the joint compound. The USG Plus-3 compound I'm using requires no extra water. It seems stiff when you remove it from the bucket, but when you start to work it in your drywall pan, it achieves the perfect consistency. You want the joint compound to resemble warm cake icing.

Fiberglass tape for flat seams

I prefer to use amazing thin fiberglass tape for all flat seams. This tape is very forgiving for a rookie. The joint compound oozes through the gaps of the glass fibers. It resembles reinforcing steel in concrete. Paper tape can develop blisters should you remove too much joint compound from under the tape.

Butt seams where two 4-foot edges meet are the hardest to finish. You end up creating a hump in the ceiling or the wall at these locations. Your task is to make the center of the hump no more than ¹/8 inch high. You then need to feather out joint compound about 10 inches either side of the center of the butt joint.

Paper tape for inside corners

Tapered seams are very easy to finish. Your goal when taping them is to have just 1/16 inch of joint compound in the seam with the fiberglass tape. You'll then add another 1/16 of an inch with your second coat.

Inside corners are very easy to do. I always use the traditional paper tape for these. You want the same 1/16 inch of joint compound between the tape and the drywall. I use a 5-inch-wide flexible taping knife to do this. You need to round off the corners of a new knife with a metal file. This will ensure the new knife doesn't rip or tear the centerline of the paper tape.

There are hundreds of videos on YouTube that will show you how to hold all of the tools to ensure you don't leave too much joint compound on the wall. Less compound means less sanding. Watch the videos, and let me know how your job comes out.

Subscribe to Tim's free newsletter at AsktheBuilder.com. Tim offers phone coaching calls if you get stuck during a DIY job. Go here: go.askthebuilder.com/coaching

Love 0 Funny 0 Wow 0 Sad 0 Angry 0

Be the first to know

Get local news delivered to your inbox!

Sign up! * I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy.

Previous articleNext article

POPULAR CATEGORY

Software

35304

Artificial_Intelligence

12291

Internet

26604