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  #16  
Old 6th Sep 2007, 10:54 AM
Valiant
 
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Glebe
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Default gyprock onto brickwork

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Originally Posted by rmartens View Post
Can you give information on how old the terraced house is how straight is the brickwork? Mainly in old buildings the brickwork is not straight at all. If you have solved all the dampness problems from the outside then you can start work on the inside. If you have not stopped the dampness then after you applied new render or sheeting you will get problems again.
If you walk into old houses with just lime and sand, the walls may be drummy but the walls are still standing so its a proven product. Lime is a proven product so if you rerender (float) using a high lime content say 6 sand 1 cement and 1.5 lime you cant go wrong if all your walls are screeded straight you will have the best proffesional finish and it will look the nicest all your new arches and picture rails will look real nice on straight work
The house is approx. 130 yrs old and yes the brickwork is not straight.
The current footings are sandstone strip blocks and the house has had cracks in the old lime+sand plaster render which I have now stripped back.
I expect that the walls will again crack if I rerender, so I have decided to use plasterboard onto steel furring channels. I am putting in a new dampcourse and going to sel the walls from any lateral damp.......my concern is that air trapped behind the plasterboard will start to create mould just from normal air condensation.......there is no option of putting in ventilation

cheers
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  #17  
Old 6th Sep 2007, 02:25 PM
quality + reliability
 
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Provided you have treated the walls for dampness, I cant see that there would be a problem with mould forming. I have stripped a few jobs with this application and have not seen mould forming on the back of the sheets.

I think it would take more than normal condensation in the air to cause mould.

Cheer Rod
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LinkBack to this Thread: http://www.renovateforum.com/f208/cant-decide-cement-render-plasterboard-54857/
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How to plaster, plastering tips, plastering cracks, holes, This thread Refback 30th Sep 2009 03:59 AM

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