I'm hoping they go back and re-spackle because that stuff shrinks as it dries. Shrinkage causes those screw holes to stick out like a sore thumb after being painted. They'll be little divets on the wall.
I mean not really though, with caulk sure it shrinks a lot, but with drywall compound? Then primer and 2 coats of paint? I'm 25 years old, but ive remodeled many houses. I've never filled a hole with drywall mud and later painted it seeing the hole afterwards, never
I am a drywall professional and I always coat my screws individually. It makes my mud go further. It dries out faster if I attempt to coat all three screws at once. Once the mud starts to dry it becomes thick and unworkable. This must be in Canada as I see died mud. Never saw that here in the states but heard it is common in Canada. Who knew?
@Crawford92 you forget people play alot for these houses.. so time isn't money in this case, they should be professional and get the job done correctly Instead of rushing.
@Crawford92 it's a small cost to give the customer a top not product instead of receiving a rush job just so the company can make a little bit more cash. Some things shouldn't be rushed and this is coming from someone who has worked in the construction industry as I have seen how these rushed jobs turn out needing repairing further down the line which costs you more money than it would of in the first place if it was just done correctly.
@Crawford92 yes, if you're going to use plaster there'd be no need to do this but nobody said this house was going to use a plaster veneer. It's likely they are just doing drywall and painting it, so youd have to fill in the screw holes.
It’s good technique for smaller jobs but doing an entire house by hand is just waste of time and money. They have tools for that. If he has a box I don’t see why he wouldn’t have a nail spotter as well
I'm a drywaller they are doing fine. It's not hard to do at all I could teach you to it in about twenty minutes. There are a handful of tricks. Notice that he cleans the knife after every time he touches the wall.if you can do that you will be fine. Also if you screw it up sand it off and start again .drywall materials are cheap. The labor is what you pay for.
Like covering the horrendous smell in the room by spraying air freshener while not getting rid of the problem at source. Serves to be a temporary solution.
But did you really work on the drywall and mudding if you aren't covered in mud & dust...lol Just Kidding My ex does drywall work and he always came home covered in the stuff.
Why doesn't he back pull his screws, i would fire you he just gives one swip on screws ,mud tends to roll out of the hole and dry a bump that he will have to scrape first before applying second coat
Depends on the size and screw spacing. A single 4x8 sheet can have 40 screws or more in it depending on if it's being stood up or horizontal and if it is installed by the code. like..every 6 inches on the edges and 8 in the field.
@@johnkutsch7411 i get it. Been there done that, was just saying standard drywall standard commercial code. You can break this down an aweful lot down to types of screws and wall types, as im sure you know its all in the specs
@@johnkutsch7411 exaggeration for effect but it’s just not efficient and would take hours to do a new house by hand instead of maybe 30-40 minutes with a spotter. You’re funny tho. Idk what experience you’re talking from but I’m used to 2000+ square feet houses which yes, would take so-close-as-to-not-matter, a whole day to spot that many screws by hand.
@@WhiteStrike01 you must have the only 4 row nail spotter that never needs refilled to reduce an 8 hour day to 30-40 minutes. Keep exaggerating for effect, everyone is good at something.
I'm hoping they go back and re-spackle because that stuff shrinks as it dries. Shrinkage causes those screw holes to stick out like a sore thumb after being painted. They'll be little divets on the wall.
My uncle does dry wall, they do 2 coats for textured finishes 3 or more for just paint
@@krispbacon9474 sad but true. So many homes are built with low quality labor and materials. While priced as if it were a castle.
I mean not really though, with caulk sure it shrinks a lot, but with drywall compound? Then primer and 2 coats of paint? I'm 25 years old, but ive remodeled many houses. I've never filled a hole with drywall mud and later painted it seeing the hole afterwards, never
But then again, many guys are just the drywall guy or the screwhead guy 😂 when you do it all you see it all
I agree with kurtiss
I am a drywall professional and I always coat my screws individually. It makes my mud go further. It dries out faster if I attempt to coat all three screws at once. Once the mud starts to dry it becomes thick and unworkable. This must be in Canada as I see died mud. Never saw that here in the states but heard it is common in Canada. Who knew?
It is comon in the states as well.
I would like to see your work in a video.
The guy in the back on stilts, whole new level!
They are really common for years now
Right?!? I was like.... niiiice.
@@harryb7912 Stilts have definitely been around for...years. 6th century BC, actually.
Another on a pogo stick and another on a unicycle
@@drewbewho And now we have circus 🎪. 😆 🤣
You missed the part where they leave the room completely covered in dust after sanding it.
That’s why wet sanding, in my opinion, is a better option.
..or even better, do a proper job like they do in Europe. Veneer plastering, no sanding dust, better job.
0:33 bruh that man in the background on stilts
There are always people suggesting it should have been done differently in these types of videos. Came to see them :)
I'm waiting for the people who actually do this to join and yell about how bad the technique is
It is bad, I can confirm. Looks pretty but it will shring when it dries and holes will be visible
@Crawford92 you forget people play alot for these houses.. so time isn't money in this case, they should be professional and get the job done correctly Instead of rushing.
@Crawford92 it's a small cost to give the customer a top not product instead of receiving a rush job just so the company can make a little bit more cash. Some things shouldn't be rushed and this is coming from someone who has worked in the construction industry as I have seen how these rushed jobs turn out needing repairing further down the line which costs you more money than it would of in the first place if it was just done correctly.
@Crawford92 yes, if you're going to use plaster there'd be no need to do this but nobody said this house was going to use a plaster veneer. It's likely they are just doing drywall and painting it, so youd have to fill in the screw holes.
It’s good technique for smaller jobs but doing an entire house by hand is just waste of time and money. They have tools for that. If he has a box I don’t see why he wouldn’t have a nail spotter as well
I thought the way he was patching walls in straight lines was already impressive, but then suddenly my man made a whole perfect circle in one go, eyeㅡ
Well isn't that the most satisfying thing to watch? ❤️
Very relaxing, indeed 😌
Doing it all day. Day in day out hit the corner bead make everything look right. That's all the makeup the cover up..
A man behind who was doong sonething was an amazing technique relly like this
This is pure art indeed
Cool thanks!!
**Skillful worker and skillfully
1000 screw holes?? That room is screwed
He makes it look fun and makes me want to copy him
I'm a drywaller they are doing fine. It's not hard to do at all I could teach you to it in about twenty minutes. There are a handful of tricks. Notice that he cleans the knife after every time he touches the wall.if you can do that you will be fine. Also if you screw it up sand it off and start again .drywall materials are cheap. The labor is what you pay for.
You know they make a tool for that, it's called a screw spotter, but good technique 👌
What happened to the screws?
Like covering the horrendous smell in the room by spraying air freshener while not getting rid of the problem at source.
Serves to be a temporary solution.
What is "mud" made of.
If this is art im artist... Hurrah
A fun fact:screw holes in walls are often referred to as “glory holes”.
Lol I've seen the tiktok roast version of this hahaha
Now we can do it,where are the professionals?
Lmao must be nice to have all the equipment you need 😂😂😂
Mud and a knife? 😂
So easy working on a newly built house.
Real skill comes from working on a 100 year old house
Well I guess the drywall said to the screw, you're screwed now :)
Ahhh no wonder they pop out after a few years
Any flat Finnish will get 2 more coats. For texture 1 is fine, but not the way they are doing it.
I get on mass production building sites it’s quicker and other trades can move in.
But this is not a patch on plastering.
My landlord finds this intresting
But did you really work on the drywall and mudding if you aren't covered in mud & dust...lol Just Kidding
My ex does drywall work and he always came home covered in the stuff.
Guaranteed to shrink because its not packed in properly.
Why doesn't he back pull his screws, i would fire you he just gives one swip on screws ,mud tends to roll out of the hole and dry a bump that he will have to scrape first before applying second coat
My screws are never in a straight line to even attempt this
I thought they put noodles in it
👍👍
Okay but nobody think aboit junji ito?
I would love to see the guy doing this when he started his trade🙄🙄
Why? Lol not much different, a little slower
대박! 👍
An average-sized room can have over 1000 screw holes?? Sorry but I think it’s an exaggeration…
Depends on the size and screw spacing. A single 4x8 sheet can have 40 screws or more in it depending on if it's being stood up or horizontal and if it is installed by the code. like..every 6 inches on the edges and 8 in the field.
@@leozmaxwelljilliumz3360 35 screws the 6 and 8 is for exterior
@@billy9995 codes vary. Even interior walls are in places are required the same as exterior.
@@johnkutsch7411 i get it. Been there done that, was just saying standard drywall standard commercial code. You can break this down an aweful lot down to types of screws and wall types, as im sure you know its all in the specs
And who minds just be kind cannot rewind work s grind.
I don't know which Raas Klaat decided to send this video but they are wasting their time.
I hate that guy. 🤣🤣🤣👍
Men of Culture we meet again 😏
Wtf professional seems to be a loosely used term these days
If you coat screws in an entire house by hand instead of using a nail spotter 🤣 good way to get paid for an extra days work I guess
If it takes you an extra day you are not a drywaller
@@johnkutsch7411 k bud
@@WhiteStrike01 spoken like a hack. Taking a day to spot screws may be typical, for you.
@@johnkutsch7411 exaggeration for effect but it’s just not efficient and would take hours to do a new house by hand instead of maybe 30-40 minutes with a spotter. You’re funny tho. Idk what experience you’re talking from but I’m used to 2000+ square feet houses which yes, would take so-close-as-to-not-matter, a whole day to spot that many screws by hand.
@@WhiteStrike01 you must have the only 4 row nail spotter that never needs refilled to reduce an 8 hour day to 30-40 minutes. Keep exaggerating for effect, everyone is good at something.
😃
좋아요
Wait...... Are they serious? Or is this satire 😂
Eeeee this doesn't look ok. The holes must be patched up few times over n over.
Copy and paste mud.
Seems wasteful
Pake semen putih ga yah klo diluar?
Gum works better
😅😅😅😅😂😂😂😂
Running out of video ideas?
Professionals lol. This is basic shit. Only impressive if you're basic.
And that's gunna shrink as it dries and you'll have to do it all over again congratulations on wasting your own time
Yes we do it two or three times depending if we skim coat. Do you know a better way?
Early!
These guys are EXCELLENT drywallers, and probably more.