Ben Shugar
New Member
Hi there
I’ve been in construction trade for 21 years & plastering for the majority of it. I’ve used lime products on a listed building as advised. I’ve lime rendered a wall, I’ve left it for a week to dry, then used lime skim & adhered & dried well.
The customer decided they wanted another wall plastered which was lathe & plaster (lime products all ready the existing wall consisted of). The lime supplier sold me a stabiliser, (something similar to plasterers stabiliser AKA as green grit. I left it to adhere, dried out thoroughly. Plastered the wall using lime skim, not the best finish, it will be suffice given the character of the property. Anyone else had this problem? I know lime takes a lot longer to dry & you can activate it again the next day, in general it’s not efficient. Also, are you able to sand lime skim once dried throughly?
I’ve been in construction trade for 21 years & plastering for the majority of it. I’ve used lime products on a listed building as advised. I’ve lime rendered a wall, I’ve left it for a week to dry, then used lime skim & adhered & dried well.
The customer decided they wanted another wall plastered which was lathe & plaster (lime products all ready the existing wall consisted of). The lime supplier sold me a stabiliser, (something similar to plasterers stabiliser AKA as green grit. I left it to adhere, dried out thoroughly. Plastered the wall using lime skim, not the best finish, it will be suffice given the character of the property. Anyone else had this problem? I know lime takes a lot longer to dry & you can activate it again the next day, in general it’s not efficient. Also, are you able to sand lime skim once dried throughly?