Home Page link

Sprayer versus roller versus power roller

Building Construction - Building Construction Industry Discussions. 

Page 1 of 2       1 2 > last >> Bookmark this page:  YahooMyWeb Yahoo!  Google Google  Windows Live Favorites Windows Live  del.icio.us del.icio.us  digg digg  Add to Netscape Netscape
Subject Author Date
Sprayer versus roller versus power roller HappyHumanist 01-27-2007
If you were  Registered and logged in, you could reply and use other advanced thread options
Posted by on January 27, 2007, 12:14 am
We just bought a new spec house, and we're painting it ourselves as
soon as the drywall is textured. I've heard a lot of bad things about
Wagner Paint Crew power sprayers. What's the best way for a DIY person
to paint the interior of a new house?

Wagner-type sprayer?
Rent a professional sprayer?
Roller?
Power roller?

Also, do I need to prime the texture? I've heard you should, but a guy
told me that the sprayed-on texture has primer built-in.

And should we caulk where our white window/door trim meets the drywall
before cutting in the color on the walls?

--- Bob


Posted by Steve Barker on January 27, 2007, 12:21 am
Good old fashioned roller and tray. Especially NOTHING with the Wagner name
on it. Priming with drywall primer will cause you to use less paint. The
texture mud and the drywall paper don't take paint the same. It'll look
much better with a primer especially if you are using a satin or semi-gloss.


--
Steve Barker



> We just bought a new spec house, and we're painting it ourselves as
> soon as the drywall is textured. I've heard a lot of bad things about
> Wagner Paint Crew power sprayers. What's the best way for a DIY person
> to paint the interior of a new house?
>
> Wagner-type sprayer?
> Rent a professional sprayer?
> Roller?
> Power roller?
>
> Also, do I need to prime the texture? I've heard you should, but a guy
> told me that the sprayed-on texture has primer built-in.
>
> And should we caulk where our white window/door trim meets the drywall
> before cutting in the color on the walls?
>
> --- Bob
>



Posted by Joseph Meehan on January 27, 2007, 6:58 am
HappyHumanist@yahoo.com wrote:
> We just bought a new spec house, and we're painting it ourselves as
> soon as the drywall is textured. I've heard a lot of bad things about
> Wagner Paint Crew power sprayers. What's the best way for a DIY
> person to paint the interior of a new house?
>
> Wagner-type sprayer?
> Rent a professional sprayer?
> Roller?
> Power roller?
>
> Also, do I need to prime the texture? I've heard you should, but a
> guy told me that the sprayed-on texture has primer built-in.
>
> And should we caulk where our white window/door trim meets the drywall
> before cutting in the color on the walls?
>
> --- Bob

I would advise against any consumer sprayers. Go with a pro level
sprayer or roller. Overall I would recommend rolling.

--
Joseph Meehan

Dia 's Muire duit




Posted by Norminn on January 27, 2007, 8:48 am
HappyHumanist@yahoo.com wrote:

> We just bought a new spec house, and we're painting it ourselves as
> soon as the drywall is textured. I've heard a lot of bad things about
> Wagner Paint Crew power sprayers. What's the best way for a DIY person
> to paint the interior of a new house?
>
> Wagner-type sprayer?
> Rent a professional sprayer?
> Roller?
> Power roller?
>
> Also, do I need to prime the texture? I've heard you should, but a guy
> told me that the sprayed-on texture has primer built-in.
>
> And should we caulk where our white window/door trim meets the drywall
> before cutting in the color on the walls?
>
> --- Bob
>
New drywall needs to be primed. Look up website for the texture product
used and see what they advise. I would bet that it should be primed.
We had a "power roller" (gadget-freak hubby) and it was a piece of junk.
Doesn't add any ease to the job and makes for less control.

If there are gaps between your trim and the drywall, do caulk. Tape the
trim to keep caulk off of it, remove tape right away.

Posted by longshot on January 27, 2007, 8:51 am

cleaning those things takes longer than painting a whole room with a regular
roller.



Page 1 of 2       1 2 > last >>
Similar ThreadsPosted
Water trailer for dust control, fire control, cement saw, asphalt roller, trench jetting, etc June 27, 2007, 8:22 am
Steel versus wood framing January 14, 2007, 6:50 pm
wood versus concrete foundation/basement January 7, 2007, 7:34 pm
Lexan versus hurricane window film March 7, 2007, 11:18 pm
Nailing floor with glue versus screwing floor without glue--which is better? October 3, 2006, 9:36 am
What kind of Sprayer is This?? October 9, 2007, 2:41 pm
When the power goes out January 26, 2007, 8:24 am
GFI Power Strips ? July 3, 2007, 8:06 pm
Horse power August 20, 2007, 8:57 pm
max power for a bathroom fan? June 5, 2006, 6:14 pm

Contact Us | Privacy Policy

XML SitemapXML Sitemap