Newbie to plastering, patchwork quilt of plasterboard lol...

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Hi folks

Total newbie to plastering here, hoping to give it a go soon, I'm after some tips.

I bought some tapered edge plasterboard for a stud wall upstairs with the hope of getting away with just taping the joins. Then I realised that I couldn't get the boards upstairs in one piece due to the size, so I had to cut them in half....thus I'm now left with boards which need to be plastered. I understand the boards have to be screwed down firmly, then scrim tape added to any joints, but is there any other advice you lot could offer a first time plasterer in this situation as regards type of plaster and technique?

Thanks in Advance :)
 
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Reading through a few posts which I didn't spot while searching earlier, a popular method seems to be a couple of coats of bonding plaster followed by finishing plaster....might this be the answer? :)
 
No, bonding is not for plasterboard, bonding is for filling holes or making a rubbish surface better for final plastering ( easy way to explain it ). On boards use board finish or multi finish, thats it.
 
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Yes. Bonding can be used on plasterboard but it is only used as a backing plaster prior to skimming. There is no need to use it unless you need to build up thickness
 
Some of the studs must have a slight bow/twist in them as when screwed down tight, there's 'steps' of 2-3mm here and there which probably wouldn't be as much of a problem if I'd used whole boards.

Also I've got the tapered bit to build up slightly.

So yes I'd need to build up thickness a little in places. :)
 
I have had to use bonding on dabbed walls that were far from tidy. If you have 3mm gaps it may be easier to apply a tight coat of bonding, you can mix it with multifinish too if it needs to be quite thin.
 
I assume the boards need pva'ing first, and how long to leave the bonding before the multifinish goes on, overnight?
 
Thanks to everyone who answered, it's really helped me build up a picture in my mind of how I need to approach this. Cheers lads. :)
 
Yes, you should be ok but watch out for suction on these areas when you put your finish coat on
 

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