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plastering over wood?

  • 02-11-2007 12:13pm
    #1
    Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 186 ✭✭


    Hi,

    was removing some old woodchip wallpaper from a ceiling in my house, and turns out part of the ceiling is wood. I'm planning on getting the whole thing skip coated, and was wondering what are the chances of plaster staying on the wood and not cracking? Will I have to rip it down and put up plasterboard?

    thanks,
    J


Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,290 ✭✭✭ircoha


    jdpl28 wrote: »
    Hi,

    was removing some old woodchip wallpaper from a ceiling in my house, and turns out part of the ceiling is wood. I'm planning on getting the whole thing skip coated, and was wondering what are the chances of plaster staying on the wood and not cracking? Will I have to rip it down and put up plasterboard?

    thanks,
    J


    dont know what u mean by skip coated, but if I were u I would put new 9mm PB over the existing pb and timber , screwing it to the existing ceiling joists with the proper drylining screws: if doing it your self u can get the 4 *2 sheets as opposed to the 8*4


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 186 ✭✭jdpl28


    ircoha wrote: »
    dont know what u mean by skip coated

    sorry, typo. Meant skim coating.

    Problem is that only a small strip of the ceiling is wooden, the rest is plasterboards (or some kind of stuff with what looks like horse hair in it. It's an old house. So the ceiling is currently all level. I'd have to slab the whole ceiling to get it level again, and it's a big ceiling.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,683 ✭✭✭Carpenter


    jdpl28 wrote: »
    sorry, typo. Meant skim coating.

    Problem is that only a small strip of the ceiling is wooden, the rest is plasterboards (or some kind of stuff with what looks like horse hair in it. It's an old house. So the ceiling is currently all level. I'd have to slab the whole ceiling to get it level again, and it's a big ceiling.

    Hi
    You are spot on years ago they used horse hair and small laths of timber and it worked so if i was you i would put bonding on the ceiling and then skim the lot .
    Bet it will stay there for your life time:D:D:D


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 760 ✭✭✭Corkey123


    I'd only bond it it needed to brought level with the rest of the ceiling before skimmimg. If it is presently at the same level as the existing ceiling you could just put a coat of Thistle Bond and then skim it.

    Hey Carpenter this town is only big enough for one tweety bird grrrr


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