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Posted by No on July 13, 2005, 2:43 pm
> Hello:
>
> Moved into a new house that has a "slot" cut out of the garage
> ceiling plasterboard. About 5 inches wide by about 6 feet in length.
>
> Think it was for some plumbing repairs a long time back.
>
> Would like to seal it up, and re-plaster it.
>
> Saw the product(s) by Hyde called "Wet & Set"
>
> Some kind of roll of tape that you wet and apply to the plaster.
> Guess there is an adhesive in iot, and is supposed to grab onto
> the existing surface of the plaster, and provide a rigid "bridge" over the
> opening that one can then plaster onto.
>
> Anyone ever use this stuff ?
> Caveats in using it ?
>
> Is there a better way ?
>
> Does it work, etc. ?
>
> Please see the link to it:
>
http://paint-and-supplies.hardwarestore.com/50-276-tapes-beads-and-patches/wet-and-set-5-x-9''-drywall-repair-roll--611775.aspx
>
> BTW: Not competent in plastering: what type and brand of plaster (or is
> it called spackle ?) should I use ?
>
> Thanks,
> Bob
>
That stuff might be OK. You say 5" wide opening and that stuff is 7" wide.
May be a big pain in the arse. What I would do is get some drywall, cut to
fit and screw it in place first. Drywall runs about $6 - $7 per 4x8 sheet
around here right now. If you go to the blue or orange store you will
usually find some damaged sheets. They will probably sell them for like $1
or $2 depending how buggered up. Cut it down with a razor knife right there
in the parking lot of you do not have a truck or SUV that can handle the
sheet. Us the drywall to bridge the gap. Then you cant just use cheap paper
tape and regular drywall compound. There are no miracle fixes for this type
of repair.
This article is good but may not be accessible w/o subscription
http://www.thisoldhouse.com/toh/knowhow/repair/article/0,16417,215031,00.html
and particularly
http://www.thisoldhouse.com/toh/knowhow/repair/article/0,16417,215031-3,00.html
Good luck
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