- Joined
- 15 Apr 2007
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- 35
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I'm drylining my living room and have boarded it out ready for a plasterer to skim it. A couple of the plasterboard edges have been a bit damaged when I've put them in:
The lower edges of the boards that were sat on the packers are a bit 'flappy' in parts, where the paper has come away from the plaster a bit but I'm not worried about this as the skirting board will cover it.
The bit that concerns me slightly is where one of the wall boards meets the ceiling has been a bit damaged through being a little tight when I was putting it on, leaving a perhaps a 15cm radius semi-circle of damage at the top. Would the plasterer be able to skim over this or will I need to cut it out & pop a new square of board in its place? If so, does anyone have any tips on the best way to do this?
I'm anticipating it will be a nightmare to cut out the now firmly adhered board - I didn't want to do it at the time though as I didn't want to get the rest of the board out of position when I was ragging it about.
The lower edges of the boards that were sat on the packers are a bit 'flappy' in parts, where the paper has come away from the plaster a bit but I'm not worried about this as the skirting board will cover it.
The bit that concerns me slightly is where one of the wall boards meets the ceiling has been a bit damaged through being a little tight when I was putting it on, leaving a perhaps a 15cm radius semi-circle of damage at the top. Would the plasterer be able to skim over this or will I need to cut it out & pop a new square of board in its place? If so, does anyone have any tips on the best way to do this?
I'm anticipating it will be a nightmare to cut out the now firmly adhered board - I didn't want to do it at the time though as I didn't want to get the rest of the board out of position when I was ragging it about.