As a former painter, a good drywall crew is important. Paint can cover a lot of crap and caulk can make a poor trim job look decent but bad drywall is impossible to pretty up.
I used to carry 2 x 12.5 up apartment stairs .... on own . I would fit 60 sheets a day . 12.5mm. I'm 60 now . I got one metal hip at 50 year old . And the other one is on its way.
I'm a carpenter that hangs drywall once a blue moon maybe on a rainy day. Just watching you guys for 5 minutes will help me up my game. First off I mark both sides of the piece to verify square. I think I will keep that habit I get paid well but don't have to fly like you guys, just hustle a little. Yeah a drywall crew would fire me.
We d the same thing in the states on commercial buildings. Metal flexes so we put in plastic made for that so the rock doesn't crack. Basically an expansion joint
Every Drywaller and boarder Gets my Respect over 40 years in the trades and Drywall well its takes a special bread I hate it can do it but no ..So my Respect boys
Made me tired but inspired just from watching these craftsmen work! I'm teaching myself how to really lay block at the age of 47, and seeing these guys turn and burn is awesome!
Are you leaving out where you cut out where the receptacles are in the rooms? NEC code spec are supposed to be every 12' around a room. I didn't see anything exposed. I didn't see any switches either. I have done my share of sheetrock work over the years. Great job, just asking.
Wow I've never seen sheets this long🤣 what are these weighing in at? I've just invested in one off them cutters that your using too trim round the doors on this video recently, it's fair too say they are quicker than a jab saw🤣 save a lot off time when trimming around sockets etc. Top job boys👌🏻
Hey William, for sure. Its not easy but wouldn't want to work in an office too! 51 years that's awesome.. you would have seen some things. I would love to hear some stories
What's with the huge gap in the top angle? I see boarders starting on the top sheet first then lower, a huge amount of boarders never take into account of how a taper would do his job without unnecessary butt joints,screw nibs not recessed.
Fast work chaps god nows where you get sheets that length but most amazingly you must have the only makita screw guns that don't constantly jam up my 2 drive me mantal keep it up chaps.
What ya gona do with that crack at the top? I hung rock for 40 + years, commercial and residential. Commercial starts at the bottom and residential starts at the top. I they would have pushed the top wall piece up to the ceiling there wouldn't be a crack, and the finisher 's job would be a lot easer...
@h2s142 For sound primarily, but also thermal. If you have a multizone ducted AC system, especially using newer tech with individual zone temperature settings, you can close doors to unused zones and have less thermal transfer, more efficient cooling/heating. But yeah the main reason is sound. It's very commonplace in most other parts of the world to have internal wall insulation, but Australia is so far behind the game with insulating buildings in general. We may not get the same cold weather as the northern hemisphere, but we get extreme heat. We still have new builds with 4mm glass, and limited wall insulation FFS
All can hang by themselves and are fast. Ive been hanging over 20 years. Ive never seen framing like that though. Its nice to get a square open layout like that. Pretty fast with those screw guns you guys use. Couldnt pay me enough to run those but I gotta give you credit for the speed with them. I could definitely work with these guys, but not running that monstrosity of a gun lol. Hand fed screwing is the best and fastest (for me). Good work though guys!
Cornice (coving) closes the gap. Leaving a gap makes it much easier to hang. If they were going to tape and mud the corners then for sure they would hang a tighter fit.
lived in a crappy house with walls that thin. Made many repairs when moving out. Just a minor bump between the studs would break it. Awful stuff. New house has 1" thick walls, a bit overkill but it was built to last over a century.
Good job guys, but there will come a day you can't do it anymore with that speed- I'm a craftsman myself from the late 60's until 2015. and my body gets worn out- believe me- I'm telling the truth- my body is worn out- at 74 years old I have difficulty walking - moving - due to too much sitting on my knees - crawling up and down ladders and scaffolding, as well as lugging and carrying everything- before we got lifts and other lifting equipment added-- have been on workplace forms at 80 meters height, so take care of yourselves out there!!
@@Ketchupbelongsonsteak no shit!?. It was more or less about using the guns with bands, and just pumping and dumping… why I said, what about popped screws. Pump and dump, leave it for the finisher. Not my first day
@@Ketchupbelongsonsteak most of the hangers we work around nail the perimeter, screw off the field. Problem we come across is they don’t have the depth set right, pump and dump, and leave us with the mess. They use screw guns, but they aren’t the decking screw guns. That’s why I said, what do they do about popped screws. No good with the OG if not set, what about the decking screw gun? Even worse for wear
@@zachwagner1838 when I started we nailed perimeters. Now I never use nails but I glue when I can. Vapor barrier obviously not gluing there. The paper on the face of drywall is so thin these days it is hard to get screws that don't pop through but it is still possible guys just need to pay attention more. I'm still on the fence for cordless guns. I feel to often when I'm finishing I'm turning those in 1/8-1/4 turn before the sheet is actually tight and doesn't move when pushed on. I love gluing because less screws and in the case a screw does break paper the sheet still doesn't move so it's not coming back as a pop later.
Genuinely curious, but to my knowledge you start from top down so that the inside corner joint for the ceiling has 2 factory edges for finishing. Ifyou don't care about that though going bottom up is easier to hang, since you can balance the top sheet on the bottom sheet. Cool video though!
@@HARRYYZ125 If you pull cornice anyway your going to need to hang new sheet. The cornice cement will take a good chunk out of the sheet on both wall and ceiling. Decision to use/not use coving would only be made on new build or major reno.
@@dmitripogosian5084 yeah any finishing trades are rough. They require technique which only comes from practice and repetition. I'll probably annoy a few chippys with this comment but framing just requires building code knowledge, the ability to measure and the right tools. Much more fun.
@@markhodges1276 Yep, that's why I always feel that plumbers, electricians, installers etc overcharge, while finishers ? I just bow and ready to pay anything they ask :)
@@Maxkil you can get 10 mm in europe as well but 12.5 is the most common. Soundproofing is more common too. I did a job where all the internal walls were sound deadened and double hung first layer with moisture resistant and second with knauf purple board. That stuff is heavy and rediculously hard to cut. Also need special screws to fix it, found that out through trial and error mostly error😅. Great watching you guys work though learnt a heap. Miss the 6m sheets everything is 2.5-3m max here.
Have you previously done a video on the framing requirements with metal studs down your way before? Appears very detailed behind the sheetrock. -Bob...
In arg. We only have sheets of 1.20 x 2.40 meters generally (standard). It is difficult to work with sheets of that size (6 meters), since they are not found in the market in our country. Thanks for the answer @@Maxkil
I love too....but to looking only.Bad memories from Vienna Austria.The serbian guy never paid me for the months as drywall worker.But one polish guy stole all of his tools because the serbian didn't paid to him two weeks for the plastering.
@@dismaldog makes sense why his rotozip flew through it. I went through 3 rotozip bits trying to cut out a hole for an ethernet faceplate in my wall. 1" thick- 1/2" cement board layered over 1/2" gypsum.
Bro I’m a 3rd period apprentice in local 9144 San Jose. And I don’t even use that square to cut it. That’s wasting time. Not hating but out here you’ll get smoked
Longest sheets of drywall I've ever seen in my life
hell yeah!, its thin though. dont be fooled we are not that strong
How long are they? 16ft?
I was going to say, are they like 3/8”?
@@Jabberwok28It's probably a half inch.
@ated1inahalf6288 10mm 6m
Watching these guys motivate me to perfect my Drywall jobs. Job well done with precision.
I hung drywall for 17 years, I wish this light weight stuff was available in my day. Well done guys.
those gentlemen are mechanics not just hangers and yes when i was hanging in the glory days it wasnt as easy
As a former painter, a good drywall crew is important. Paint can cover a lot of crap and caulk can make a poor trim job look decent but bad drywall is impossible to pretty up.
yeah mate I agree
This is why I am replacing all the drywall in me house.
Any good finisher can hide the dry walkers mistakes.
I used to carry 2 x 12.5 up apartment stairs .... on own . I would fit 60 sheets a day . 12.5mm.
I'm 60 now . I got one metal hip at 50 year old . And the other one is on its way.
I'm a carpenter that hangs drywall once a blue moon maybe on a rainy day. Just watching you guys for 5 minutes will help me up my game. First off I mark both sides of the piece to verify square. I think I will keep that habit I get paid well but don't have to fly like you guys, just hustle a little. Yeah a drywall crew would fire me.
Why are you leaving gap at top and seeing board on floor. We always went tight to ceiling and left gap at floor
We d the same thing in the states on commercial buildings. Metal flexes so we put in plastic made for that so the rock doesn't crack. Basically an expansion joint
I know that in Australia they use cornice which covers that gap
Yep the floor trim covers the gap.
I wouldn't hire these guys to sheetrock anything.
@@dragonf1092 why’s that
No insulation or sound proofing???????
Every Drywaller and boarder Gets my Respect over 40 years in the trades and Drywall well its takes a special bread I hate it can do it but no ..So my Respect boys
I always use screws when I hang drywall. Takes a little longer, but much less likely to pop over time.
No insulation! Right on!
Been in construction most of my life as a contractor, these guys are the real deal. I wish my crews had been 1/2 this fast
Yea no kidding. The large boards not joints… most crews would take them 15 20 mins to do that wall
Chances are that they are making much more though.
they would have been faster if 3 out of 3 all had tattoos then they work harder too not pay their rent and work for another paint on their body. lol
Sometimes you pay for a man's expertise, sometimes for his tools. You get both with this crew. Top dollar for top work is where it's at.
Made me tired but inspired just from watching these craftsmen work! I'm teaching myself how to really lay block at the age of 47, and seeing these guys turn and burn is awesome!
yeah I really want to learn more, some day I want a farm and to build some things myself!. Never too old to learn something new I say
Are you leaving out where you cut out where the receptacles are in the rooms? NEC code spec are supposed to be every 12' around a room. I didn't see anything exposed. I didn't see any switches either. I have done my share of sheetrock work over the years. Great job, just asking.
The electrician does that and they are all marked out prior to sheeting and get pulled through later
Are these guys always in the zone? They seem so content.
thats a good crew, finish at 12 down too the local :)
Are these cheap homes you're working on? With the metal studs, thin drywall, and no insulation, sound must travel across the house with ease.
Who insulates an interior wall?
@@arod6789 pretty much every country besides Australia
@@craigpalmer256467 alot of interior wall are not insulated in homes it's just the exterior for heat amd cold
I noticed there are no electrical boxes.
@@craigpalmer256467 haven't seen any and I'm in the US
well done boys !! that s good practice indeed
Wow I've never seen sheets this long🤣 what are these weighing in at? I've just invested in one off them cutters that your using too trim round the doors on this video recently, it's fair too say they are quicker than a jab saw🤣 save a lot off time when trimming around sockets etc. Top job boys👌🏻
Never seen sheet that long.good job guys.
14 footers probably hung many of them you can also get 54"instead of standard 48" for 9 foot ceilings
Might even be 16' I've hung many over the years
@harryhoudini2645 20ft sheets 3/8" standard in australia
I been doing it 51 years u earn your money people in offices should never complain
Hey William, for sure. Its not easy but wouldn't want to work in an office too! 51 years that's awesome.. you would have seen some things. I would love to hear some stories
What's with the huge gap in the top angle? I see boarders starting on the top sheet first then lower, a huge amount of boarders never take into account of how a taper would do his job without unnecessary butt joints,screw nibs not recessed.
Fast work chaps god nows where you get sheets that length but most amazingly you must have the only makita screw guns that don't constantly jam up my 2 drive me mantal keep it up chaps.
I thought the same about the makita but all the drywall crews in australia seem to use them exclusively
No there men im59 been do stuff like that for 40 yrs still walkin upright
Wild lookin studs . I’ve been framing metal for over 20 yrs , mostly piece work . That framing looks a bit different than here in the US. :)
These guys are for real!🔥💯💯
Now that is efficiency. Is the guy doing the cutting called the 'cut guy' like the framers use?
We don't call it drywall in Australia mate.
What ya gona do with that crack at the top? I hung rock for 40 + years, commercial and residential. Commercial starts at the bottom and residential starts at the top. I they would have pushed the top wall piece up to the ceiling there wouldn't be a crack, and the finisher 's job would be a lot easer...
It gets cornice, otherwise they would need to get wider board
Australia has cornice everywhere as standard
That can't be in Australia because they did not use stud adhesive on the studs before fixing the sheeting!
Yeah we did
Why do builds in Aus not often use interior wall insulation? Are they just being cheap?
Yes they are being cheap
I dunno.. Maybe so that if you fart on one room people in the other don't hear it?
No reason to insulate interior walls. Duh
@h2s142 For sound primarily, but also thermal. If you have a multizone ducted AC system, especially using newer tech with individual zone temperature settings, you can close doors to unused zones and have less thermal transfer, more efficient cooling/heating. But yeah the main reason is sound. It's very commonplace in most other parts of the world to have internal wall insulation, but Australia is so far behind the game with insulating buildings in general. We may not get the same cold weather as the northern hemisphere, but we get extreme heat. We still have new builds with 4mm glass, and limited wall insulation FFS
@@smellygoatacres see above
Never seen sheet rock that long.
You just did 🤭
Its standard size in Australia
All can hang by themselves and are fast. Ive been hanging over 20 years. Ive never seen framing like that though. Its nice to get a square open layout like that. Pretty fast with those screw guns you guys use. Couldnt pay me enough to run those but I gotta give you credit for the speed with them. I could definitely work with these guys, but not running that monstrosity of a gun lol. Hand fed screwing is the best and fastest (for me). Good work though guys!
why dont you put the drywall all the way up
Cornice (coving) closes the gap. Leaving a gap makes it much easier to hang. If they were going to tape and mud the corners then for sure they would hang a tighter fit.
@markhodges1276 yeah mate, we put the bottom sheet on a block of plasterboard then sit the next one on it. Cornice finishes the top
3/8 inch...for ceilings maybe. Those walls are paper thin.
lived in a crappy house with walls that thin. Made many repairs when moving out. Just a minor bump between the studs would break it. Awful stuff. New house has 1" thick walls, a bit overkill but it was built to last over a century.
Pretty impressive skills hanging sheetrock is no joke.
These guys are good but why gaps at the too
Crown moulding goes there
Weird..drywall not stacked on the wall, cutting it on the floor. Metal studs in a home.? Walls to not go all way to the ceiling. Is this professional.
They stack plasterboard on the floor for safety reasons as well not put the weight of the stack on the walls, I suppose.
No insulation in the wall? Gonna be a noizy house...
na all ya need to be a good drywaller is a sleeveless Iron Maiden shirt and some acid Rock.... I am a Carpenter btw
Iron maiden. Hell yeah, with rips in it.
Fukin easy with one cut per wall. Try this on a reno
Where the hell did they learn to hang Sheetrock big gap between the ceiling and the wall.
55 or 90mm Cornice covers the gap.
Where did you gain your Sheetrock knowledge from?
Yep that was a huge Milwaukee tool haul, pity every tool on site is Makita
??? How long is that board
6m-(20ft)
Good job guys, but there will come a day you can't do it anymore with that speed- I'm a craftsman myself from the late 60's until 2015. and my body gets worn out- believe me- I'm telling the truth- my body is worn out- at 74 years old I have difficulty walking - moving - due to too much sitting on my knees - crawling up and down ladders and scaffolding, as well as lugging and carrying everything- before we got lifts and other lifting equipment added-- have been on workplace forms at 80 meters height, so take care of yourselves out there!!
no soundinsulation between the drywall??
1 5/8 steel studs in a house?
Just curious about popped screws. Work behind guys with screw guns, and always have pops to deal with
Installed wrong . Nothing to do with them being screws.
@@Ketchupbelongsonsteak no shit!?. It was more or less about using the guns with bands, and just pumping and dumping… why I said, what about popped screws. Pump and dump, leave it for the finisher. Not my first day
@@zachwagner1838 I hate those guns. My shoulder can't push them.
@@Ketchupbelongsonsteak most of the hangers we work around nail the perimeter, screw off the field. Problem we come across is they don’t have the depth set right, pump and dump, and leave us with the mess. They use screw guns, but they aren’t the decking screw guns. That’s why I said, what do they do about popped screws. No good with the OG if not set, what about the decking screw gun? Even worse for wear
@@zachwagner1838 when I started we nailed perimeters. Now I never use nails but I glue when I can. Vapor barrier obviously not gluing there.
The paper on the face of drywall is so thin these days it is hard to get screws that don't pop through but it is still possible guys just need to pay attention more.
I'm still on the fence for cordless guns. I feel to often when I'm finishing I'm turning those in 1/8-1/4 turn before the sheet is actually tight and doesn't move when pushed on. I love gluing because less screws and in the case a screw does break paper the sheet still doesn't move so it's not coming back as a pop later.
That’s the longest sheets of drywall I’ve seen
It will never not bother me seeing people do drywall from the ground up instead of the ceiling down.
You know why?
Genuinely curious, but to my knowledge you start from top down so that the inside corner joint for the ceiling has 2 factory edges for finishing. Ifyou don't care about that though going bottom up is easier to hang, since you can balance the top sheet on the bottom sheet. Cool video though!
100 times faster then me but mine is better, I like it tight against the ceiling it helps support the edges of the lid.
Yeah we have a cornice that goes up for that., if you want it tight here you would need to buy a wider sheet and cut every sheet down
What are the tools being used?
Makita collated screw guns
Dude has some SICK tattoos.
Try that with 5/8" 😂
JK...thats how it done, son!
If you cover up the studs and dont mark it how are you going to accurately screw it off on every stud
yeah good point, so need to mark it takes the guessing out of it
Too much time if you have a good screw at top and bottom and you know your trade eyeball is all it takes.
@@harryhoudini2645 the time it takes me to mark my studs is a fraction of the time fixing duds trying to not miss
rebull can at 4:26 is still there when they put the drywall at 6:56. lol enjoy the ants 🤣
We eat ants here in Australia
These guys right here Mexican put it up as fast as the other guys can tape it off what you think
Swisted showed up to the party
What’s with the gaps at the top, curious
cornice
But what if customer at a later date doesnt want coving..thats shocking you dont care. Amateur at best .
@@HARRYYZ125 If you pull cornice anyway your going to need to hang new sheet. The cornice cement will take a good chunk out of the sheet on both wall and ceiling. Decision to use/not use coving would only be made on new build or major reno.
шумоизоляция в сделку не входила
tsk tsk.... always hang top sheet first.. taping that ceiling joint would be a pain.... if the gap is on the bottom, baseboard covers it
Yes you are correct, however we are not taping that, it's gets a drywall cove cemented to it.
@@Maxkil oh ok... cool vid
What’s the drill holder you guys use?
Why the gap at ceiling joint sssss?
Faster is not always better.
You guys are quick
Used to run 2miles 530 am lift wieghts then lay hi density block all day or concrete
You want the right crew to get it done you gotta pay the right bucks good tradies are worth there weight in the best tools
Sure are
Good job guys how long r those drywall? I love mudding
6meters man, I love mudding as well. Everyone does I think 👍
@@Maxkil I want to love it, but as a DIYer I just don't get enough reps. I spend more time swearing than mudding.
@@markhodges1276 As a DIYer, I hate mudding, painting, tiling etc. Much prefer screwing, nailing and assembling in general :)
@@dmitripogosian5084 yeah any finishing trades are rough. They require technique which only comes from practice and repetition. I'll probably annoy a few chippys with this comment but framing just requires building code knowledge, the ability to measure and the right tools. Much more fun.
@@markhodges1276 Yep, that's why I always feel that plumbers, electricians, installers etc overcharge, while finishers ? I just bow and ready to pay anything they ask :)
В пустоту между листами нужно укладывать Шумоизоляция, иначе слышимость будет плохая.
Где то тут писали что изоляция, в том числе шумо, пойдет потом.
No screws in the feild ?
Stud adhesive instead
Gotta love Australia. 20 foot boards. Cornice everywhere.
Yeah, the sheets are thinner to elsewhere you know. Only 10mm walls 🫣
@@Maxkil you can get 10 mm in europe as well but 12.5 is the most common. Soundproofing is more common too. I did a job where all the internal walls were sound deadened and double hung first layer with moisture resistant and second with knauf purple board. That stuff is heavy and rediculously hard to cut. Also need special screws to fix it, found that out through trial and error mostly error😅. Great watching you guys work though learnt a heap. Miss the 6m sheets everything is 2.5-3m max here.
He'll no but they are great workers
Have you previously done a video on the framing requirements with metal studs down your way before? Appears very detailed behind the sheetrock. -Bob...
All the houses in Australia and New Zealand that are steel frame are pre fabricated and just assembled on site like a puzzle
@@victorguerrero4249 does that make it more economical and/or more efficient? If so, is there a way to bring that to the United States?
@@steventhebroker less time less waste so easy a trained ape could assemble it
@@victorguerrero4249Lol. That’s dope. How do I go about getting that system here in South Florida? What’s the cost?
@@steventhebroker Pretty sure they build metal garages & shops like that in the US
pretty fast, is that 1/2"? board? man 14' footers?
That be 10mm sheet,20 ft here.
How long is that board?? 4,80 meters¿?
Our sheets come in 6.00 meters or 236.22 ″ for you Americans
In arg. We only have sheets of 1.20 x 2.40 meters generally (standard). It is difficult to work with sheets of that size (6 meters), since they are not found in the market in our country. Thanks for the answer @@Maxkil
Impressive sheetrock handling.
in my neck these guys get paid by the sheet, not the hour so it literally pays to be fast. not sure how it works there
yeah its by the meter, and in this case, the workers all have a share of the money, so everyone has an incentive to be productive
Piece work , grab it and growl .
What are those shoes covers called?
I would like to work woth you i have a 5 yeras experience about it iam here in east london
Conroy Lakes
Good work
My 3 man crew does over 10k sqf a day
No insulation for sound proofing?
No
Vcs trabalham muito estão de parabéns pelo serviço... Brasil...
Laying board down on metal studs, not pros
Are those 16ft sheets?
20ft. 6 meters
what the thickness of the sheet?
10mm or 3/8”
There only staking rock anybody can do that. I can see daylight in the top angles that's not right .I'm a professional for 50 years .l still work
you have been dumb for 50 years as well
Love drywall
I love too....but to looking only.Bad memories from Vienna Austria.The serbian guy never paid me for the months as drywall worker.But one polish guy stole all of his tools because the serbian didn't paid to him two weeks for the plastering.
Why dont they put any insulation?
Wow amazing! No drywallers in the history of drywalling have ever done this!!
Quick question, what thickness is the drywall that you guys normally use?
10mm standard
@@dismaldog wow no wonder they lift and toss it around so easy haha.
And people say American walls are made of paper
@@WalrusMcDonald12n2na2 which people?
@@dismaldog makes sense why his rotozip flew through it. I went through 3 rotozip bits trying to cut out a hole for an ethernet faceplate in my wall. 1" thick- 1/2" cement board layered over 1/2" gypsum.
apparently they do not believe in butt joints. lol those sheet are loooooong,
Bro I’m a 3rd period apprentice in local 9144 San Jose. And I don’t even use that square to cut it. That’s wasting time. Not hating but out here you’ll get smoked
How thick is the plasterboard?
3/8 drywall or 10mm
@@Patrick00323 What sizes are the large long sheets of p/b you have on the video?
@@vincenzoniccoli1986 The Drywall is 19 8.22 feet long or 6 meters long by 4 feet wide they are 96 to 103 pounds per sheet.
I couldn't imagine putting ⅜ drywall up without a backer That's just too thin Juat leaning against the wall would cave it in
Professionals. But... it's Easier when the walls are straight.
isso aí é aonde ?
Australia
3/8"