Ive been a tough carpenter all my life & been trying to become a good finisher / drywall & since watching your videos ive learned so much more & you do bad ass work & great educational vids. I appreciate you .
Thanks so much here in Houston we’ve been doing freeze repairs and have been so busy I haven’t had time to make a video I’ll be dropping something new soon have a blessed evening!
Amazing tutorial. I am doing a reno at my housie and I am about to start taping the new drywall. Do you wet the tape when applying it to flat walls? Also, do you use this tape for 90 degree outside corners, or do you strew in metal ones?
When tapping flats you can use regular joint tape which has to have mud behind it to avoid blistering you can look at my other video of full proof tape using the fiba fuse is a lot easier for DIY guys ,the flex tape that I use is for inside and outside 45 only I do use a paper face cornerbead for 90° outside corners called No Coat. Also have a video on it. Metal corner bead is guaranteed to crack in your lifetime I don’t recommend using it hope this helps
Nice job Scott. Thanks for all the details. Some folks on YT do the same thing in 60 seconds, and folks don't have a clue in terms of all the details you covered. Takes more time but much appreciated. Do you not believe in reinforced outside corners?
I assume you’re talking about cornerbead? I have a video on cornerbead I use a product called No Coat it is fantastic! That’s the only cornerbead in America that has a lifetime guarantee it will never crack
Can’t believe it passed electrical inspection. Outlet wall appears to be well under 24 inches while the opposite wall more than, which would require an outlet.
On this particular video I was probably using regular mud I don’t remember it’s been a while but you can use either or hot mud will speed up the process of your finished product for sure
@@scottssheetrockservices yes, I agree. I've run into this situation several times in the past. I always inform them of the potential problems that come from a mistake like this and that my workmanship warranty won't cover this. I always give them the opportunity to fix it properly themselves or pay me to. If not , I take pictures and email them just to cover my ass. 😁
Scientifically speaking that might be right, but Drywall slang for the last 30 years of my life. Every off angle is called a 45. That’s just what us mud slingers called them!!
Ive been a tough carpenter all my life & been trying to become a good finisher / drywall & since watching your videos ive learned so much more & you do bad ass work & great educational vids. I appreciate you .
Thanks so much here in Houston we’ve been doing freeze repairs and have been so busy I haven’t had time to make a video I’ll be dropping something new soon have a blessed evening!
Best drywall man alive
What do you do next? How do you finish it off before painting ?
Great video and tutorial. Thank you for your time and effort to make it and share it with us. Greetings from Croatia.
No problem I’ve been doing this a long time I figured I could start sharing my knowledge hopefully help some folks out thanks for watching!
Amazing tutorial. I am doing a reno at my housie and I am about to start taping the new drywall. Do you wet the tape when applying it to flat walls? Also, do you use this tape for 90 degree outside corners, or do you strew in metal ones?
When tapping flats you can use regular joint tape which has to have mud behind it to avoid blistering you can look at my other video of full proof tape using the fiba fuse is a lot easier for DIY guys ,the flex tape that I use is for inside and outside 45 only I do use a paper face cornerbead for 90° outside corners called No Coat. Also have a video on it. Metal corner bead is guaranteed to crack in your lifetime I don’t recommend using it hope this helps
@@scottssheetrockservices Excellent tips. I am going to return the metal corer beats and get the tape on ones for my outside 90s. Thank you so much!!
Nice job Scott. Thanks for all the details. Some folks on YT do the same thing in 60 seconds, and folks don't have a clue in terms of all the details you covered. Takes more time but much appreciated. Do you not believe in reinforced outside corners?
I assume you’re talking about cornerbead? I have a video on cornerbead I use a product called No Coat it is fantastic! That’s the only cornerbead in America that has a lifetime guarantee it will never crack
Would this work for a vaulted ceiling that has a crack in the center where the drywall comes together?
Yes, it will work for any angle larger than a 90° angle Hope this helps!
Great video, thank you!
Can’t believe it passed electrical inspection. Outlet wall appears to be well under 24 inches while the opposite wall more than, which would require an outlet.
There’s a lot of things that get overlooked in the wild Wild West!
But we do some consistently good Drywall
Are you using hot mud?
On this particular video I was probably using regular mud I don’t remember it’s been a while but you can use either or hot mud will speed up the process of your finished product for sure
not 45 degree angles, more like 135s
Yeah you’re right we call them all 45s though that’s just a common term we use in the industry
@@scottssheetrockservices outside 45s are rare and a fun challenge! I've done a few. thanks for the response tho bro!!
Can u use a corner finisher like TapeTech/AMES/Columbia/Level5 for 45s or u have to do by hand?
Homeowner broke the joints right over the corners of the door. A BIG no no.🤔
That is definitely true but when the homeowner decides to hang it we have to finish it like it is I’m sure you know that have have a great weekend!
@@scottssheetrockservices yes, I agree. I've run into this situation several times in the past. I always inform them of the potential problems that come from a mistake like this and that my workmanship warranty won't cover this. I always give them the opportunity to fix it properly themselves or pay me to. If not , I take pictures and email them just to cover my ass. 😁
This would be considered an 225 degree angle. Not 45.
Scientifically speaking that might be right, but Drywall slang for the last 30 years of my life. Every off angle is called a 45. That’s just what us mud slingers called them!!
@@scottssheetrockservices can you do a 45?