I seem to remember you saying you didn’t start out a 2 coater.
lol just seen this rich where did i say that? i was taught 2 coats, the nearest i come to one coat is giving it 2 coats out of the same mix but ive never been a one coat merchant even when i spongefloat
Christ Steve how the hell do you expect me to remember that far back, I have trouble remembering what I did last week these days
Who knows but no slight was intended & it was probably rather “tongue in check” reading it back! I must have picked something up from another thread at the time cos it isn’t part of this one; maybe I miss read or misunderstood or whatever!
I’m probably going to lay myself open to all sorts of abuse here but I’ve advised newbies several times in the past & only just recently not to get too hung up on 2 coats, it’s not compulsory or a hard & fast rule. The whole point is to control the suction on the first coat & slow it all down to give time to get that all important perfectly flat finish with the second coat. Two coats is essential on large areas where your going to be working on the limit but if you can work fast enough on a perfectly flat surface such as new stud walls, why bother with a 2nd coat when one will give the same result! If you’ve got someone mixing for you, two coating is no real problem as you just get presented with continuous mud when you need it but I nearly always work alone. I don’t usually 2 coat on smaller areas unless I’m doing two opposing walls at the same time but I will load up & go over some bits with the same mix to bring it back if necessary; but that’s what the 2nd coat is about anyway! I see it as a ballance on the sq/m area & weather or not it’s worth me taking the time out to wash down & mix a second coat; if you can work quick enough on the area involved & your good enough to get the perfect finish, I really don’t see the point.