- Joined
- 24 Mar 2020
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- 67
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Hello,
I hope this is the right place for this.
I have had my kitchen plastered and now are ready for mist coating. Like always, there was something i forgot to do before the plastering was done and i remembered just as the plasterers completed! Anyway, this job involved me using a 150mm hole saw to cut a hole in a timber framed plastered wall and feed some cabling through. The intention was to use the centre puck that came out with the drill and secure this back in afterwards, fill the gap around the edge and happy days. Anyway my better half decided to throw the bit that came out away as rubbish so i had to create a new piece using fresh plasterboard. As this piece did not have any skim on it, it sat back a few mm from the finished wall level. I screwed some timber in behind it, fixed and secured the new piece in and then scraped some of the skim off the wall around the hole and put scrim tape across the joins ready to skim. See photo below.
I used toupret Joint and skim for this. It went on fine and had no issues. Anyway, as it has dried it has slumped in the centre where the hole is a bit deeper. As expected ok but as it has dried a number of random cracks have formed in the filler. As this will obviously need a top coat, do these cracks just need raking out and then skimming across with easifill or similar? The substrate is definitely secure and free from movement so are these likely as a result of filler shrinkage during drying??
First photo is before, second is when first filler coat was wet, third is when first filler coat has dried.
THanks.
I hope this is the right place for this.
I have had my kitchen plastered and now are ready for mist coating. Like always, there was something i forgot to do before the plastering was done and i remembered just as the plasterers completed! Anyway, this job involved me using a 150mm hole saw to cut a hole in a timber framed plastered wall and feed some cabling through. The intention was to use the centre puck that came out with the drill and secure this back in afterwards, fill the gap around the edge and happy days. Anyway my better half decided to throw the bit that came out away as rubbish so i had to create a new piece using fresh plasterboard. As this piece did not have any skim on it, it sat back a few mm from the finished wall level. I screwed some timber in behind it, fixed and secured the new piece in and then scraped some of the skim off the wall around the hole and put scrim tape across the joins ready to skim. See photo below.
I used toupret Joint and skim for this. It went on fine and had no issues. Anyway, as it has dried it has slumped in the centre where the hole is a bit deeper. As expected ok but as it has dried a number of random cracks have formed in the filler. As this will obviously need a top coat, do these cracks just need raking out and then skimming across with easifill or similar? The substrate is definitely secure and free from movement so are these likely as a result of filler shrinkage during drying??
First photo is before, second is when first filler coat was wet, third is when first filler coat has dried.
THanks.