Theres working fast and then there running around for 10mins while someone films to make it look like your fast.... no chance they keep up this pace all day everyday.
True story. I’m sure this crew is good and efficient. But I don’t think this is a realistic pace for an entire day...and week...and year. But who knows. Maybe they finish and office in 3 hours and take off the rest of the day!
@@Maxkil dunno mate we still gettin good M2 rate and hr rate here in NSW so go as fast or slow as they want, quick you finish the quicker you get to the pub!
35 years an still going as a gyprocker and people yes this pace all day every day. It’s how it’s done here in the domestic market. I’ve worked in Qld, NSW and Vic Some of the comments here are from some seriously lazy bastards. Super odd (and great)to see non Asians still in the trade. And for another idiot know it all comment about power boxes of which we don’t have here in Aussie and we glue so the need for mechanical fixing everywhere is eliminated.
Hanging drywall can go really really fast if everyone knows their place and the routine of the project. Notice one guy is pulling measurements/cutting, one guy is hanging/tempscreweing with the occasional assistance of the guy measuring while the third guy is finishing out the screws and cookie cutting doors/windows. Awesome team effort! Teamwork makes the dream work.
In my hanging days 60 years ago good fast hangers would average 50 12' sheets a day in wood framed houses 8' ceilings nailed on, no glue or power tools. We had aluminum horses which were new then and a big advance for us. My best day was 83 4'x12's hung by my self in day light. And yes it was all piece work @ $1.00 per sheet. $250 a week was good money then. Very glad I got to do it and enjoyed your video. Thanks
this crew is amazing notice how theyre not talking to each other much everybody knows what to do the guy is amazing cutting drywall the rotozip and the guns help a lot nice video.
You do know , that the better you are, the more you get pr hour ? In my business the average hourly wage is 120Danish kr / h i get 450kr / h cause im damn good, and damn fast Working as fast as you can, even when paid by the hour will give you more jobs, and better jobs. You will get picked for advancement etc... :)
Flawless execution. Timing good. rythem nice....even good attitudes and hustle. They are on my level, and I'd be honored to work with these fellow sophisticates!! Well done gentleman. ✊✌
I have hung drywall professionally for 20yrs and if you get a well tuned crew then the speed they are working at is normal. The only problem i had watching this is setting the bottom first then the top. That leaves a gap at the top pretty nasty that the finishers have to fill every crack before they start taping. Very clean job though.
I did this for there 3 years before joining the military in my twenties. You have 2 speeds. When you're getting paid by the hour and when you're getting paid by the sheet. I was the apprentice working for 2 brothers that were masters at it. Once I got the hang of it you can knock it out without really saying much like these guys. Everyone has their job to do and you don't stop until lunch or until the job is done.
these guys work like a finely tuned orchestra; everyone seems 2 know what the other guy's doing and what they should do 2 make it work. U rarely hear anyone talk; they just move like one multi-armed unit. loved watching this.
This is the pace you have to be on all day or even faster when you are doing piece work the faster you work the more money in your pocket and maybe even a chance to go home early... Cheers from Colorado keep going at it boys #drywallLife
1/2 is paper and I noticed they put the bottom one down first then stack it leaving that corner gap on the ceiling and I've never used adhesive glue either
Great job. And yes you can work on that speed all day. As long as you have a good crew. Now if you the only one working that fast you will burn out by lunch time. They have a good crew. Respect. Now keep in mind that every day is different and sometimes you come in 100% and knock it out then theres other days you dont have the same energy level.
Wouldn't be to hard to tape those gaps. Just use heavyweight taping mud and an 8 inch knife so you have the bigger flat edge on the side to run corners. It's gonna suck in, but come back through the next day with a bucket of hot mud and run one side through the place and then the other. More work=more money.
my hanging crew are 2 brothers, both over 50. they get 12$ per sheet and average 50-60 board a day. usually knock off around 2 pm. . are in high demand because they look out for the finisher and dont leave gaps like im seeing on the top angles here.
Can't people on here just appreciate a crew of lads grafting hard in harmony? Yes, they are doing it for the camera, Yes, it would be impossible to maintain that pace all day every day, so what if it's half inch and not 5/8ths...we'll done lads you've got a winning formula...putting food on your families table and making it look easy 👍🏻
@@raycosar2983 I fucking hate insulation with a passion! When i was doing residential we have to crawl attics in the summer, it was fucking awful. I hate that itchy feeling you get on your arms that lasts for hours from the glass fibers
I hung the skit for 45 years and they changed the name multiple time from sheetrock,plaster boards to gyprock and few more name but to me it was always called shitrock.
I'm pretty sure they did it this way because it's not about electrical work but a clean work space and efficient work flow to install drywall quickly .
I was thinking the exact same thing. Shit if it wasn’t for lights and switches and outlets I could throw rock up like them too. I like how they are just tacking and keep moving and have a guy come screw off behind them and cut the openings
See the plates on the walls? They are for electrical. The switches and power points get fitted off to them after the drywall is in. The electrician was the last guy at the site before the drywall fixers come. So there is no issues here.
Great work! I have some question. What is the difference beetwen horizontal and vertical cartboard mounting? I see you gluing the board. What kind of glue you using? Can you oder custom cutted board in your country? I compare ways of working beetwen countries. Tank you
Tapers must be able to fly not having to ever tape ceiling angles. Where I'm working... Even when there is crown molding being installed. Everyone wants at least a tape coat to seal it. Massive time saver not having to tape angles. Nice video. That is some seriously easy hanging. But they are jammin pretty good.
@@marcusl7055I always push my wires in after drywall is up... with a hammer😁. I guess only good hangers can use a tape rule and cut out a box hole before zipping a sheet. GOOD HANGERS.
@@TanakaDaRocka Yeah, i can respect that. i always have my router bit 1/4 passed the drywall, but ive seen so many electricians leaving the wire folded bulging out of the box...
@@marcusl7055 I agree with dude...most electricians are lazy AF and don't push them to where they wont be cut by the router. NO ONE pre-cuts boxes anymore unless YOU have a baseball size bunch of cat 5 and other shit coming out the wall! Do you go the extra mile and think of the next trade in line? FUK NO you don't! You're like every other overweight American looking for the most money on someone else's shoulders! Get TF the truck and do some physical labor!
I hang and finish..no other trade physically carries as much tons a day then a drywaller..but good job good crew it’s hard to find a solid crew like that
Yep, I was thinking the same thing! I'd like to see how fast they'd be throwing up drywall on a early 1900's home where the wall studs are not perfectly square! Something tells me these guys only install on new builds.
@@garrettbeck434 Yes, I do know that, but new homes are generally more square than older homes, especially those that have had remodeling work done to them by folks that don't know what they're doing.
when you start doing big pieces and full sheets specially those 12ft long sheets everything looks like you working fast but when is time to start cutting all the pieces and cut outlets boxes and working inside closets or small rooms, ceiling everything goes slow. but good job anyway
Or perhaps this dude is one of those lazy, work by the hour, type of guys that do what need to keep a job. Too many in the world nowadays! I work to my personal satisfaction and capacity, no one else's!
We have to install screws every 200mm centres on both skins stagger junctions and firemastic studs to walls and abruptments different boats for different moats as they saying goes
Working fast isn't the only thing. In my opinion the quality is rather poor: Where is the insulation between the drywall? Why isn't the drywall doubled for better stability? Where is the ductwork for cables? Where are the switches or wall sockets?
in Australia they pull the cables through afterwards, no box only a mounting plate. There is insulation in the outside walls. No need to double drywall, doesn't make it more stable, only a sound proofing method. Besides hanging the sheet at a 90 degree to the framing provides the strength. Quality seems fine in my opinion
This crew works like a well oiled machine. I like the use of glue as it speeds things up. Here is So Cal I don't see crews out here using glue. Must not meet code out here.
being that dimensions in the description are metric and metal framing is common in commercial but not so much in residential I would venture to guess they are not in the States.
I did this today with my brother in law at a house just the two of us.... these guys have it easy AF we held up the (12 foot sheet rock/ drywall at times until it needed to be cut down to size) on the ceiling by hand using a hammer and nails then walls and later screwed off among the rest of the dirty work with the mud and whatnot ..fun times lol what these guys are doing looks like a breeze compared to how my brother in law does his work
Its not that hard for them, Like something your good at, looks hard but you become accustomed to things you know. They all got kids they working for and get paid by the meter. Thanks for watching Elias👍
Maxkil i know what you mean. i‘m a craftsman as well. i’m 44 years now and watching your videos is like watching me in my younger years. i love my work too, but if you work like that all day, month, years, it’s not healthy for you. if you love your job or not.
@@Maxkil thats why it looks so bad. noone cares 4 details. screws should be on upright walls no further than 25cm. board to board min 3 mm delatation. tape between construction wall and board. you did it fast i cant deny that. someone mentionedit already wires? electric boxes? its a show of vid sorry.
Not sure what part of the world you are from, but in the US there isn't typically insulation on interior walls. It can be added for extra sound dampening, but isn't standard.
Rarely do I see insulation go up separating rooms. Typically a noise reducer is only used around a bathroom unless specifically called for in the blueprints.
Nice hanging. I recommend placing temporary plaster blocks to the centre of every sheet at approximately every second stud. This will compress the sheet to the frame until glue dries keeping it flat and straight without any bows. Tip for my contractors out there.
It's not necessary in the states as we use ⅝ (25mm to Aussies) on 24 inch (609mm) centers and ½ (13mm) on 16 inch (406mm) centers. The strength is, in most cases, far more adequate than needed.
There will be cornice like this www.bunnings.com.au/gyprock-csr-55mm-x-3m-cove-plaster-cornice_p0731449 going over that gap, which is allowed in Australia.
Theres working fast and then there running around for 10mins while someone films to make it look like your fast.... no chance they keep up this pace all day everyday.
or there is just working fast
True story. I’m sure this crew is good and efficient. But I don’t think this is a realistic pace for an entire day...and week...and year. But who knows. Maybe they finish and office in 3 hours and take off the rest of the day!
@@Maxkil dunno mate we still gettin good M2 rate and hr rate here in NSW so go as fast or slow as they want, quick you finish the quicker you get to the pub!
35 years an still going as a gyprocker and people yes this pace all day every day. It’s how it’s done here in the domestic market. I’ve worked in Qld, NSW and Vic Some of the comments here are from some seriously lazy bastards. Super odd (and great)to see non Asians still in the trade.
And for another idiot know it all comment about power boxes of which we don’t have here in Aussie and we glue so the need for mechanical fixing everywhere is eliminated.
gonget Ive never seen an Asian sheetrocker in my life!!
Hanging drywall can go really really fast if everyone knows their place and the routine of the project. Notice one guy is pulling measurements/cutting, one guy is hanging/tempscreweing with the occasional assistance of the guy measuring while the third guy is finishing out the screws and cookie cutting doors/windows. Awesome team effort! Teamwork makes the dream work.
johnnny boo Gtfo of this comment section
In my hanging days 60 years ago good fast hangers would average 50 12' sheets a day in wood framed houses 8' ceilings nailed on, no glue or power tools. We had aluminum horses which were new then and a big advance for us. My best day was 83 4'x12's hung by my self in day light. And yes it was all piece work @ $1.00 per sheet. $250 a week was good money then.
Very glad I got to do it and enjoyed your video.
Thanks
this crew is amazing notice how theyre not talking to each other much everybody knows what to do the guy is amazing cutting drywall the rotozip and the guns help a lot nice video.
A dramatic scene of drywall installation. At that speed must be a Friday
maybe there thirsty
Lmao it’s Friday before lunch
Must have had a good lunch lettin the good times "Roll"
A Monday after a big weekend on the gear moiteee
Just for the video lol or yea must be a Friday lmao 😂
Boss: Sorry lads, you’re being paid by the hour.
Lads: Whaaaaaaaaaa?
tf out here with LADS
You do know , that the better you are, the more you get pr hour ?
In my business the average hourly wage is 120Danish kr / h i get 450kr / h cause im damn good, and damn fast
Working as fast as you can, even when paid by the hour will give you more jobs, and better jobs. You will get picked for advancement etc... :)
Yeah mate totally agree!!
@@KimAllMighty Good salary
@@KimAllMighty Working fast doesn't necessarily mean you are better...
as an electrician im just cringing thinking of the boxes they probably missed cutting out going fast
i am crying about using drywalls for wall in general. i use only aerated concrete blocks. its silent, warm, easy to use.
My exact thoughts
No boxes in Australia
@@dead_mazay_ru we too use ytong
My boss: Starting today you're paid by the square meter
Me:
Flawless execution. Timing good. rythem nice....even good attitudes and hustle. They are on my level, and I'd be honored to work with these fellow sophisticates!! Well done gentleman. ✊✌
Definitely paid by foot or meter. And showing off for the camera. Or it's Friday and everyone gets to leave when all the boards are up.
i think its all 3 mate. hehe. Please subscribe
These guys aren't fast
They are just slightly better then average
@@John.strong What would be faster?
Never did enough drywall to merit the expense of a drywall gun, but the neighbour's just love it when you've got 3000 screws and a impact driver
This *must* be reality tv! Haven't seen a crew work like this unless it's on property brothers!
Not only does taking off the shirt and wearing Daisy dukes lower the weight, it also makes you more aerodynamic for a faster performance.
not to mention the extra mobility, allowing you to do, well pretty much anything
Not to mention the masculine hatness
And you look sexy doing it.
Not really an accurate representation of a real building site, any1 who is in a trade will be fit to tell u this
DarLav Plus there cheating with those guns! Those arent even real sheetrock guns !
@@yonkers702lvpride3 why not? They are Makita drywall guns....
Harles74 you know what i mean. If not you know nothing about sheetrock
@@yonkers702lvpride3 So you mean Hilti guns?
Me and Nature yuup
I have hung drywall professionally for 20yrs and if you get a well tuned crew then the speed they are working at is normal. The only problem i had watching this is setting the bottom first then the top. That leaves a gap at the top pretty nasty that the finishers have to fill every crack before they start taping. Very clean job though.
These guys are pros they dont need all day they do it in 10 minutes and look cool i never seen drywall that long sheets
That shit looks like paper you can probably hear some taking a shit from the other side os the building
It sure helps you don't have to have them fitted lengthwise since the room is exactly 2.4m/the height of two sheets
I did this for there 3 years before joining the military in my twenties. You have 2 speeds. When you're getting paid by the hour and when you're getting paid by the sheet. I was the apprentice working for 2 brothers that were masters at it. Once I got the hang of it you can knock it out without really saying much like these guys. Everyone has their job to do and you don't stop until lunch or until the job is done.
these guys work like a finely tuned orchestra; everyone seems 2 know what the other guy's doing and what they should do 2 make it work. U rarely hear anyone talk; they just move like one multi-armed unit. loved watching this.
These guys are straight up drywall GANGSTERS
Everyone's a drywall superstar with 1/2 inch board
paper-houses ... that's how us houses fly away at first wind gust...
They still have that structure under the drywall. Drywall is just for the cosmetics.
1/2 drywall is no different from 5/8 there no integrity difference. And that's metal framing. That house ain't going nowhere.
1/2” sheetrock anyone can do it fast, show a video working to 5/8”
For real man.
Try 1/4 Hardie siding panels lol
el sheetrock de pulgada para hospitales en el ciling con tornillo de rondana
5”8 that shits heavy 1”2 is a breeze
3/4 fire shield 😂these guys will cry
So what I’ve learned is that to drywall fast 2/3 of the crew needs no shirt (10% more horse power)
More aerodynamic 😉
My crew would smoke these guy's with our shirts on💪🍻
I've been hanging for 2 years now, love it. Good work guys
Thanks man. Good luck
This is the pace you have to be on all day or even faster when you are doing piece work the faster you work the more money in your pocket and maybe even a chance to go home early... Cheers from Colorado keep going at it boys #drywallLife
Hi Daniel, yeah that's right, that's why i don't do the new work myself
Sweaty shirtless pink guys... this is like the Hooters of construction. 😻
1/2 is paper and I noticed they put the bottom one down first then stack it leaving that corner gap on the ceiling and I've never used adhesive glue either
If the money stays in your pockets it is very good but if the money goes to your boss's pocket you are not doing well
Percentages. The pie gets cut. Otherwise you get dudes dragging their boots
😂 😂 These guys are fn ANIMALS!!
Most sheet rockers get paid by the board
@@zacheagle3018 out of curiosity, I know the rate must vary, but what would you say is a good per sheet pay rate if I hired someone?
@@joker2712005 I know it's a late response but I had my whole house sheetrocked, new construction (140 sheets @ $10 per sheet)
Great job. And yes you can work on that speed all day. As long as you have a good crew. Now if you the only one working that fast you will burn out by lunch time. They have a good crew. Respect. Now keep in mind that every day is different and sometimes you come in 100% and knock it out then theres other days you dont have the same energy level.
I would refuse to tape the gaps in the top angles.
You would be wasting your time
They usually install some kind of cornice or trim makes a significant impact for finishing
i hear u. hang top bd. first
Wouldn't be to hard to tape those gaps. Just use heavyweight taping mud and an 8 inch knife so you have the bigger flat edge on the side to run corners. It's gonna suck in, but come back through the next day with a bucket of hot mud and run one side through the place and then the other. More work=more money.
It could be p50 finish or some sort of cornice
my hanging crew are 2 brothers, both over 50. they get 12$ per sheet and average 50-60 board a day. usually knock off around 2 pm. . are in high demand because they look out for the finisher and dont leave gaps like im seeing on the top angles here.
Very fast but what happened with the insulation 🤔
I was sparky on this site and I can tell you they move like this all day 🤝
When you and your crew live by the moto
Time is money and you recording that to show that you live by it and mean it !
I'll go with that. sounds good! Thanks for watching, please subscribe
Can't people on here just appreciate a crew of lads grafting hard in harmony? Yes, they are doing it for the camera, Yes, it would be impossible to maintain that pace all day every day, so what if it's half inch and not 5/8ths...we'll done lads you've got a winning formula...putting food on your families table and making it look easy 👍🏻
NOT 1/2 3/8 IT IS SHIT
I’ve always installed the top piece first then the lower. Why the lower first? Don’t you end up with gaps?
it's for ease of install, they are using the bottom piece as support for up top, makes install way easier.
Looks like they have spacers under the bottom sheet so the top sheet won’t have a gap.
The guys here make it look easy but this is very hard work!
3 guys = a strength of a thousand men... great job guys
Very faster 😀.....i love it .....thx guys
Took me 10 minutes 58 seconds to measure, cut and hang my first piece of drywall.
#metoo
😅
dont be haters. work is work. easy or not easy its lookin good. thumbs up fellas 👍
tks Oscar pls subscribe
I cannot think of anything more uncomfortable than hanging drywall without a shirt on.
Installing insulation without a shirt on a humid summer day
They had to make it sexy so that people would watch.
I don’t like the dust go inside my shirt
Gotta show off for the big shoot
@@raycosar2983 I fucking hate insulation with a passion! When i was doing residential we have to crawl attics in the summer, it was fucking awful. I hate that itchy feeling you get on your arms that lasts for hours from the glass fibers
These guys are amazing🔥😬 it took me three days just to do my garage & i don’t even think i did it correctly 😂🔥
I hung the skit for 45 years and they changed the name multiple time from sheetrock,plaster boards to gyprock and few more name but to me it was always called shitrock.
This is what you call construction chemistry! Nice job!!
U guys are good. Drywall hanging is tough. 👍🏼 good job amigos
Thanks poco loco. Appreciate you watching. Please subscribe if you are not.
This crew is very impressive! 💯🔥
Could be that I'm just blind ... but no outlet or switch boxes?
I'm pretty sure they did it this way because it's not about electrical work but a clean work space and efficient work flow to install drywall quickly .
I was thinking the exact same thing. Shit if it wasn’t for lights and switches and outlets I could throw rock up like them too. I like how they are just tacking and keep moving and have a guy come screw off behind them and cut the openings
See the plates on the walls? They are for electrical. The switches and power points get fitted off to them after the drywall is in. The electrician was the last guy at the site before the drywall fixers come. So there is no issues here.
they will be cut eventually by punching a small hole from the back and cut it later.
This weekday i was wondering and if they cover them and don't measure or mark them how do they find them later 150 for a missed potlight...
Great work! I have some question. What is the difference beetwen horizontal and vertical cartboard mounting? I see you gluing the board. What kind of glue you using? Can you oder custom cutted board in your country? I compare ways of working beetwen countries. Tank you
What about electrical outlets? That’s what makes things time consuming.
Different lads, different crew, not the drywallers problem
Electricians normally mark the locations on the floor or take notes of locations prior to the sheets going up.
Glad my drywall guys cut the electrical out for me
I was thinking the same thing, do they not have electrical in this building.
@@gfromkalama8041 2 days patching the sparkies mess
You guys are bad ass!! I'm a drywaller from denver you guys have a good team
I want to know more about them guns that makes shit way faster we have to reload every time with a new screw..
It’s an attachment. There’s a product review of them by crazy Russian hacker, I can’t remember what’s it called but I’m sure you can find it on amazon
Search "Makita collated auto feed screw gun"
Great team work .i like how they have one person doing all the cutting and 2 putting up makes the work even faster
ye, but that way they keep the installing guys without the cutting knowledge so they control theire salary easier. lol
Top work lads. From Scotland
Thanks John. Glad your watching mate. Enjoy the winter.
@@Maxkil you too guys it's fkn freezing over here after you saying that. Lol. It's to go -8 and record snowfall. 😫😫😫😂😂😂
@@supershev1888 not easy mate... That is super cold.
How are you screwing into those metal studs? With self tappers?
yes, looks like silver screws.
Nothing personal, but the way you cut and fix the board i can definitely tell you guys are not plastering the board, but someone else.
Right?
Wrong.
Tapers must be able to fly not having to ever tape ceiling angles. Where I'm working... Even when there is crown molding being installed. Everyone wants at least a tape coat to seal it. Massive time saver not having to tape angles. Nice video. That is some seriously easy hanging. But they are jammin pretty good.
Yeah it's very quick. Sometimes it's square set and you do. Mostly it's Cornice. We have long sheets too so no butt joints
Thanks for watching James
These are the guys that cut my wire with the cutout tool when they buried my box. -Angry electrician.
Push your wires in lazy electrician.
@@marcusl7055I always push my wires in after drywall is up... with a hammer😁. I guess only good hangers can use a tape rule and cut out a box hole before zipping a sheet. GOOD HANGERS.
@@TanakaDaRocka Yeah, i can respect that. i always have my router bit 1/4 passed the drywall, but ive seen so many electricians leaving the wire folded bulging out of the box...
In australia we push the wire in the wall and put a hammer hole were the power point/switch is and thats it up to the sparky from there
@@marcusl7055 I agree with dude...most electricians are lazy AF and don't push them to where they wont be cut by the router. NO ONE pre-cuts boxes anymore unless YOU have a baseball size bunch of cat 5 and other shit coming out the wall! Do you go the extra mile and think of the next trade in line? FUK NO you don't! You're like every other overweight American looking for the most money on someone else's shoulders! Get TF the truck and do some physical labor!
This guys are in beast mode!
I can be one kick away from every room in that building.
I hang and finish..no other trade physically carries as much tons a day then a drywaller..but good job good crew it’s hard to find a solid crew like that
Mason laborer, brick and block all day and mixing mudd
Our ancestors fought hard to create reasonable working conditions. we young people should not trample this by regressing
running in the workplace? madness!
You are welcome to try beeing as fast in my 1950s house where nothing is straight.
Yep, I was thinking the same thing! I'd like to see how fast they'd be throwing up drywall on a early 1900's home where the wall studs are not perfectly square! Something tells me these guys only install on new builds.
You think things are square in new houses? I can tell you first hand they are not...
@@garrettbeck434 for real
@@garrettbeck434 Yes, I do know that, but new homes are generally more square than older homes, especially those that have had remodeling work done to them by folks that don't know what they're doing.
You go around with a wood planer and packing strips first
Hanging is hard work... thumbs up guys!
They would be even faster without the guy filming. 😂. Awesome!
These dudes work like robots mate... If they keep this rhythm of job they d finish this house in record time 👏👍
Owner :I'm sure this room had a window.
Tradies : what window. Anyways, Looks better without.
What was the blue stuff you laid on the beams and what kind of nail guns?
Stud adhesive it's a kind of glue
Makita drywall collated screw guns.
when you start doing big pieces and full sheets specially those 12ft long sheets everything looks like you working fast but when is time to start cutting all the pieces and cut outlets boxes and working inside closets or small rooms, ceiling everything goes slow. but good job anyway
Thats the fist time I've ever seen steel framing, looks cool
😳 I feel sorry for finishers 🤣 if they don't have crow molding, everything is going to look like 💩in a year. Minute 8:40
Hang top piece first fellas. Drywall 101
This crew is very impressive! 💯🔥bruh that’s some of the biggest sheets of rock I’ve seen ..👍
yeah 6 meters long our sheetrock, but only 10mm thick
After the video they went home lol 😂
vito fall 😂
actually I left they continued till they finished, then went home, perhaps they went to the pub?
Or perhaps this dude is one of those lazy, work by the hour, type of guys that do what need to keep a job. Too many in the world nowadays! I work to my personal satisfaction and capacity, no one else's!
me when the Boss arrives
Lol. That's funny bro 😂👊👍
Just to make their boss rich.
Exactly, When you start getting older you realize that and your body hurts. Don't work too hard !!
Clearly, you have never worked construction. These guys are working hard for themselves.
Ok Zoomer
I have worked very hard and fast construction for 40 years. Now my body hurts bad.
This is why you hire a crew like this, it costs more up front, but it pays off in the end.
get back to us it ten years and see how you feel young and fresh yep been there done that now i have back problems work smarter not harder
Go to the joint Chiropractic people, they'll help dude
We have to install screws every 200mm centres on both skins stagger junctions and firemastic studs to walls and abruptments different boats for different moats as they saying goes
Working fast isn't the only thing. In my opinion the quality is rather poor:
Where is the insulation between the drywall?
Why isn't the drywall doubled for better stability?
Where is the ductwork for cables?
Where are the switches or wall sockets?
in Australia they pull the cables through afterwards, no box only a mounting plate. There is insulation in the outside walls. No need to double drywall, doesn't make it more stable, only a sound proofing method. Besides hanging the sheet at a 90 degree to the framing provides the strength. Quality seems fine in my opinion
This crew works like a well oiled machine. I like the use of glue as it speeds things up. Here is So Cal I don't see crews out here using glue. Must not meet code out here.
Work with 5/8 at that speed, then I'll call you fast.
excellent, good pace of work and coordination. a good team of professionals !!!!
ever wonder why American house fall over in a slight breeze... have a look here...
i was thinking the same thing here, almost no screws in the drywalls also
being that dimensions in the description are metric and metal framing is common in commercial but not so much in residential I would venture to guess they are not in the States.
@@ismaybruneel1867 the first 2 are just tacking it up, the third guy is coming behind and screwing off.
not in the U.SA.
I did this today with my brother in law at a house just the two of us.... these guys have it easy AF we held up the (12 foot sheet rock/ drywall at times until it needed to be cut down to size) on the ceiling by hand using a hammer and nails then walls and later screwed off among the rest of the dirty work with the mud and whatnot ..fun times lol what these guys are doing looks like a breeze compared to how my brother in law does his work
Excellent job
i don’t wanna work like that.
working fast and efficient is a other story, but running while working? nope.. no way.
Its not that hard for them, Like something your good at, looks hard but you become accustomed to things you know. They all got kids they working for and get paid by the meter. Thanks for watching Elias👍
Maxkil i know what you mean. i‘m a craftsman as well. i’m 44 years now and watching your videos is like watching me in my younger years. i love my work too, but if you work like that all day, month, years, it’s not healthy for you. if you love your job or not.
nobody said if they do the job 3x faster they do not do extra days off 4 party? else they will run out of steam eventually.
@@Maxkil thats why it looks so bad. noone cares 4 details. screws should be on upright walls no further than 25cm. board to board min 3 mm delatation. tape between construction wall and board.
you did it fast i cant deny that.
someone mentionedit already wires? electric boxes?
its a show of vid sorry.
Shout out to my fellow Craig
Bruh, no insulation? You fart and the people in the room next door will hear it....
there is insulation, they need 1 side of the wall done before it can rest against anything
Not sure what part of the world you are from, but in the US there isn't typically insulation on interior walls. It can be added for extra sound dampening, but isn't standard.
Rarely do I see insulation go up separating rooms. Typically a noise reducer is only used around a bathroom unless specifically called for in the blueprints.
👍Fairplay thats good teamwork I'm a plasterer from the UK
Nice hanging. I recommend placing temporary plaster blocks to the centre of every sheet at approximately every second stud. This will compress the sheet to the frame until glue dries keeping it flat and straight without any bows. Tip for my contractors out there.
Yeah true that.
It's not necessary in the states as we use ⅝ (25mm to Aussies) on 24 inch (609mm) centers and ½ (13mm) on 16 inch (406mm) centers. The strength is, in most cases, far more adequate than needed.
Omg. my respects, greetings from Cuernavaca ...! I admire you
The screwing spacing is all wrong, they just getting it up
Yes and then Nr 3 is doing the final screwing.
we use glue in australia stronger than screws and means you dont have to screw as much
Seems like they have done this a time or two. Great team work.
I feel bad for the tapers :p always start from the ceiling down when boarding
Todd Saenger never seen this either lol that’s what they make mud for
There will be cornice like this www.bunnings.com.au/gyprock-csr-55mm-x-3m-cove-plaster-cornice_p0731449 going over that gap, which is allowed in Australia.
Pyramid Tools correct
Looks like a crew worth working with
I've never hung from the bottom up
Royale Mousseau Only with cornice finish, two off cuts to keep 10mm off ground. Much easier to fix off!
I’m on month 3 on finishing bedroom with 8 sheets of 8 foot sheetrock.
Not many outlets ..
No they get pulled through later by electrician
There's cables in the walls you can see them. The electrician knows exactly where.
What is the blue glue he's brushing on the studs? Does it work on wood, too?
That's called stud adhesive, designed for timber studs as well. Works really well.