Gents
Did this job today and would be most amused with more of your golden nuggets of suggestions from your own experience -
I usually carefully run the blade along the top nib of the cornice cuting into the ceiling and re-board right up to the cornice.
Today I had the whizz bang idea of trying out the suggestion of cutting the lid an inch short of cornice and boarding up to that (scrim the join and skim over).
I had the even whizzier idea of getting my stone grinder disc out and buzzing it along a chalk line. It's gonna be a sh1t storm in there anyway once the old horsehair plaster starts flying right?
Overall these turned out to be 2 crap decisions that I'd be quite happy not to repeat.
The blade is mightier than the grinder for cutting through old, shot plaster. Couldn't see the chalk line with all the dust so cut a right wonky line which i tidied up with a blade and a straight edge. Which i then later cut back again level with the cornice.
I left the laths up and boarded over them. They were fitted neatly and not overlapping. They still made the boarding more challenging than it should have beeen...
Did this job today and would be most amused with more of your golden nuggets of suggestions from your own experience -
I usually carefully run the blade along the top nib of the cornice cuting into the ceiling and re-board right up to the cornice.
Today I had the whizz bang idea of trying out the suggestion of cutting the lid an inch short of cornice and boarding up to that (scrim the join and skim over).
I had the even whizzier idea of getting my stone grinder disc out and buzzing it along a chalk line. It's gonna be a sh1t storm in there anyway once the old horsehair plaster starts flying right?
Overall these turned out to be 2 crap decisions that I'd be quite happy not to repeat.
The blade is mightier than the grinder for cutting through old, shot plaster. Couldn't see the chalk line with all the dust so cut a right wonky line which i tidied up with a blade and a straight edge. Which i then later cut back again level with the cornice.
I left the laths up and boarded over them. They were fitted neatly and not overlapping. They still made the boarding more challenging than it should have beeen...