1-I am not 60 yet , nor a mason ever , but owl doubt any real masons ever got stunned by this dietary like process known forever , other than perhaps the sifting part to it. 2-And there is no need EVER to use a potato masher nor any of those to get messy utensils.Besides, I can tell you might be , or pretend to be a bad hombre , but surely as hell, God you are not. 3-Besides , the only real Mess i that you needs , specially so that young kids learn about motivation and excelling at school and later at work , so that the commie Chinese, nor any other thugs bent on world domination ever eat our lunch, IS the footballer, the soccer star and goat who came from Europe, after being born in Latin America and is now playing in sonny South Florida , whose first name is LIONel, or El Lion (a la ASLan) Messi, with his out of this world fabulously scoring and winning left foot... 4- ...Hear and heed for good, for these are ''as the days of Jonah'' when God beckons all to repentance Pronto!. Enough of the same old same old UNadulterated BS and ways of old. 5-Again, better that you and company... Shema!!!.
Having been in the Marine Corps, I was convinced that only they could take a simple project, no matter what it was, and overcomplicate it to the point of absurdity. However, after watching this video, I have witnessed absurdity brought to a new level.
@@RingZero Okay, I didn’t say the Marine Corps wasn’t necessary, I just said that they have the ability to over complicate a lot of projects. To say that the Marine Corps isn’t necessary leads me to believe you never served in any branch of the service. If the day ever comes, you better hope the Marines haven’t gone anywhere.
That was just about the most overly complicated way of patching drywall that I've ever seen. Instead of getting 2 tools dirty, he also got half the kitchen utensils dirty also. Plus he ripped a lot of paper off the backside of the drywall, which weakens it at that point. The fact that he didn't apply any type of seam tape over the edges means that it will crack and split in the near future causing more work.
I am stunned. I always mix up in the saucepan, apply the flour paste with the tea towel, and flatten with the rolling pin. Pastry is good for smaller holes, though I do recommend baking it first for larger holes as he has done.
Honestly if my husband used my kitchen tools for that, I would take away his man card, push him out of the way and show him the correct way to repair drywall. ( yes I can put up drywall, and mud and tape it too.)
*If you don't have any pastry you can use Digestive Biscuits instead.* I've discovered that two Digestives are precisely the same thickness as standard drywall. The only downside is that I had this really terrible day one Friday when I had to trim a client's hedge with a blunt pizza cutter, so after I'd finished I went to the pub and got absolutely blootered. When I rolled home at 1am I was ravenous but had no food at all in the house. I remembered I'd used the last of my Digestives the day before to put up a partition wall in the bedroom. I ended up eating half of my new wall and I can tell you that Magnolia emulsion tastes disgusting.
@edntz It supports the plug piece. Without it, the piece can easily drop into the wall or end up being crooked and not flush with the wall. And it will be weak and prone to damage again without the backing.
@@pablovonduckbill7802 maybe the OP of this comment? I think any mason would be stunned by the time wasting on this & pretty sure the cook of the house would be too with all their utensils pinched to be used in this project for no reason
Absolutely! You don’t need to use your kitchen utensils, pizza cutter, and 50lbs of drywall mud lol. They actually make tools that will work much better. Ex. Utility knife, rasp, etc. I think the old man should stick to making cookies. Lol!😂
As a Fibrous Plasterer, this is such an easy repair. Some casting plater soaked jute scrim to form a wad fills the hole. Then as the plaster steady's, fill out until roughly level then bring to a finish with a joint rule or busk. That is a 5 minute repair.
@hopehadley8844 > Love that this video has no annoying background music or > over-friendly voice narrating it step by step. What a relief! > >Silence is good! And if the silence had been accompanied by 4:37 of a plain black rectangle as the video, it would have been even better!
That's because everyone watching/ filming him was too pre-occupied with holding in their laughter, placing side bets on what stupid kitchen utensil he would use next and estimating the longevity of this "repair" to narrate.
This is the way pretty much everyone repairs holes in drywall only not with kitchen tools. The only other thing was the use of hot glue. I just put the same mud on the support stick I use on the rest of the project. I have also seen others just drive a screw through the patch piece. It is a good idea to adhere or fasten the patch to the support because it helps prevent cracking of the edges over time.
@pookatim...I agree, making the patch stronger than the surrounding wall, but he also didn't use seam tape which over time could show cracks around patch.
Very interested to see this, as I had the same idea about a week ago, only I used two pieces of wood and no glue between the wood and the plasterboard. Maybe it would be stronger, if one used the same technique on the join between the patch and the drywall, that one uses to join two pieces of plasterboard, i.e. bevel both edges to make a groove between the two pieces and fill it with jointing plaster, finish it off with fibreglass roving and then finish plaster over it. That should be stronger. If you don't want the piece of wood left inside, one can put the wood outside and screw it down to two curly plastic inserts inserted in the drywall and two in the the inserted piece of plasterboard. then, you fill the groove between the insert and the wall except for where the wood obstructs you. When the plaster is set, you can remove the wood and the curly inserts and finish plastering. (Sorry! I do not know the proper English term for the curly plastic inserts that you can screw into plasterboard to hold a screw.)
@@antonywooster6783 there is no good reason to not just put the board inside though... Mudding around the board on the outside just to remove that board And md some more just seems like a waste of time. No offense...
As an electrician I would cut a hole in drywall to fit a electrical box. Alongside the edge of the hole I would secure a piece of wood with No 6 fine drywall screws. Then put the box in and screw it to the wood. In renovations I would cut 4 inch diameter round holes with a hole saw in drywall. Save the round pieces of drywall. Then I could fish my wires through the area. Later I put in a piece of wood inside the drywall in the middle of the hole. Then I screwed the round pieces onto the wood. After that it is easy to apply drywall compound and hide the hole. This is the best way to fish wires through existing walls. Just cut a series of round holes with a hole saw throughout the areas where you fishing your wires through.
When a baker does drywall. Got the sifted cornstarch, the icing, the whisk, the pizza wheel... "Where do you get your tools? Home Depot?" "No, Sur La Table"
@@SophieBird07 I know what I mean and I was correct with what I typed. Please don't interfere, especially as you are wrong. He typed *Alot* and it should have been *a lot*
A 60 year old mason would absolutely be stunned if he saw you doing that. And would probably say something like, "What the hell are you doing? I'm not a drywaller but even I know that's wrong. Stop wasting time, grab the right tools and hurry up and do it right or get out of the way and let someone else do it."
I think this man was a brick mason, it clearly stated that so his tools wouldn't do the job. But looked like a home repair in his own home. You use what's on hand. It did the job so why all y'all pros critiquing his work? Let's see your video of building a floor to ceiling brick fireplace.
@@montamiddleton9318 Where exactly does it state that the person doing this video is a brick mason, Or that he's at home, or that these is the only tools he has? Watch some of his other videos, they're all like this. And he has more tools. It's all in good fun. Now get down off that big ole tall horsey and go get a hug.
I usually patch drywall doing something similar to this, though it varies depending on what materials I have around. I do find that I get a very smooth patch with very little sanding if I mud 2 vertical strips of mesh tape, then once they are hard and smooth, overlay 2 horizontal strips over the top and bottom gaps. That way, there is a screed going around the perimeter to guide the knife while filling in the center.
I was a Painter/Handyman and sometimes I had to repair Drywall holes. Your method works to perfection. The way I did it was get a piece of Drywall and pollyfilla it and stick it from the inside. leave for the rest of the day then next day fill in completely with Pollyfilla then let it dry then sand and paint wall.
His method is a good, solid way to do it. He just left out the important part of using tape. To make the patch go quicker use self sticking mesh tape over the joint and 20 minute hot mud.
Isn't there a visible rim from the mesh tape then ( level)? Can I repair a hole in a drywall ceiling with this method? Is mesh tape really necessary to repair a 9 cm hole?
This is how I was taught by a contractor at Hunter Army Airfield back in 1995. I'm a female and was 23 at the time. I was actually pretty good at it. I still prefer this method, excluding the cooking utensils.
I used this method but found it very difficult to patch the back of the drywall in that 4" space inside the wall. Next time, I'll try patching the front where all the texture, paint, and finishing is.
Probably would ask to have some of what you’re smoking… after seeing your work they’d still want to smoke with you but also would be curious as to which isle the kitchen utensils are found on
lol guess we can use culinary tools for drywall as well 😂 Very versatile! This is a very smart method! In maintenance I have had plenty of times where I will use shim boards behind Sheetrock to anchor to so I don’t have to cut all the away to the studs.
I've patched maybe a few hundred holes kinda like this. Here's what I learned: you don't need a pizza cutter. A razor knife will do the same thing. Every drywaller has one of those. I would have used two plywood strips to cover the corners, but what he did will probably be ok. Some paper tape would have been good. With an area the size he covered, it will be easy to hide. I've NEVER sifted my hot mud. But maybe I'll try it next time. ( I'm retired, so probably not.) Do you need kitchen tools to patch drywall ? I never did. I reduced my tool inventory for this sort of thing to what I could fit into a mud pan. I'll give this three stars for clear demonstration.
Just bevel the hole edges at 45 degree and same (but opposite facing) bevel the patch edges. Then NO need for strips or screws and the patch can't be pushed in as it's backed all around by the beveled edges.
Maybe the Mason should stick to Mason worn and not drywall work. Don't use a jigsaw on drywall, you have pipes and electrical cabled back there. Use a razor knife and make shallow cuts until you feel it fut through the back paper on the drywall. Put your blocking on the edges, not the center of the hole so there is support where it's needed.
It’s takes more than 5 minutes to go through the kitchen cabinet drawer to fine cooking utensils. A hand drywall saw or utility knife works no need to drag out a jig saw. I always use drywall tape, each to there on
Not sure why all the kitchen gadgets, but it looks good. Can I ask why you didn't screw the new piece onto the wood piece you added. Would that have added support?
@marrerofamilyfarm > Can I ask why you didn't screw the new piece onto the wood piece you added. I'm guessing the vegetable knife with a pointed end was in the dishwasher.
Use a utility knife to cut the square out vs a jigsaw and to cut the rear paper. Seemed like you tore the rear part of the paper which weakened the rear part of the drywall. Why use hot glue when you could use one screw to hold the patch? I only use hot glue when screws cannot be used. I also like to use Fibafuse on any open seam.
I use the wood method on larger holes, except I use two for more support. Then I use screws to attach the drywall to the wood. The glue thing is a waste of time. Although, thanks to UA-cam my patches may still use the wood supports I will use the ‘California’ method for the patch itself.
WOW! The bit of baton was the only thing that was done properly! 1 - Fix the baton(s) for support. 2 - Measure hole and cut a bit of plaster board / drywall a couple of mm smaller. 3 - Screw piece of plaster board to the baton(s), 4 - Cover gaps with mesh tape (so as not to crack, the video shows a potential for a hairline crack as there is no mesh tape.) . 5 Fill over patch with filler and remember to feather it out so not to notice. Always remember there are a lot of people on youtube looking legit but don't do things the right way.
It is very interesting to use kitchen utilities. I would never do a carrot shedder or a gravy stirrer to repair the wall, but I have second thoughts now!!😮
no, only holds the plug in place till it sets, but it needs to be taped or more simplky just do a california patch, much stronger and won't crack like this
Shoot! All this time I thought using my paper plate method was the way to go but...after seeing this technology wow learn something new every day. Thanks you sir you are a real contribution to our society.
I’ve done that same patch a lot up until I saw the edge (mortaring idea) and the glue on the wood. Good ideas although I do like wood behind the corners. Good video!
@@RobertTozzi the reason I put wood on all 4 corners is what if it’s just across the center. If someone bumps the wall there with not much pressure it’ll break the patch easily.
Where I come from, the brown paper is always the backside (wall cavity side) of gypsum board / drywall, so by the time I pulled the drywall off the opposite side of the wall (to access the brown side of the sheet, then hung new drywall, finished, textured and re-painted it. There was a lot more work required and it was really expensive. 🤣🤪🤓 AI
Should have first used a garlic press to get the clumps out of the powder... then a food processor to mix it with the water. Also, pro tip... use a toaster to heat up the joint compound... makes it spread smooth like butter.
Perfect. I was near perfect before doing about 90%. I never bothered buttering both the edges of the hole and plug piece. Also, I screw the patch to the wood, but hot glue is a nice touch.
That was amazing. Is there any possible way to repair an 8" x 12" hole the plumber made through the shower tile and backer board without having to replace entire shower wall? Thanks
Two would be better for sure but it will still hold. Tape not needed. He should have spritzed the gypsum core around the edges for a better bond. But will still hold.
@cameronbateau6510 you have an unfinished cardboard surface that's unpaintable. So I'd you want it finished you'd need to skim coat the whole thing and basically do a ton more work that needed.
I swear sometimes the damp sponge makes the mud soft again a little bit. I like sanding sponges to control the dust, but it seems like they can do the same. My preference is dry-sanding.
A few years ago after we moved into our house I started patching holes around the house. The time it took to patch about 20 plus holes took half the time this took to patch that one hole. And yes some holes needed new drywall replaced.
I'm sure that the only people stunned were those that knew the right way to do a repair such as that! And, what's with the pizza cutter? Plus, he gave a big thumbs up at the end, as well! 😅
I am not an expert, but have done my own remodeling for a long time. This is similar to what I have done, but is a slight enhancement. Instead of the piece of wood, I used a piece of drywall, which means I had to wait for the mud glue to dry. The wood and screws would be faster... But I usually have other things to do, so no matter.
I usually cut away the damaged section, then back the hole with hardboard, epoxied to the undamaged drywall. You can hold it in place by drilling two small holes into the hardboard, passing a loop of cord through the holes, then tying the cord and passing a stick or something through the cord. Turning the stick tightens the cord and hence pulls the hardboard against the drywall and holds it in position while the epoxy sets. then just cut the cord, cut a piece of drywall roughly to-shape and fill in with paste. Dead easy and you can then mount anything onto the previously damaged section of wall because it is now backed with hardboard. Works like a charm and especially useful when the hole was torn by a failed fixture that needs to be reinstalled to the same location.
Why would anyone be stunned by this? It is the standard method to patch a hole drywall. Certainly this is a useful 'how to' video but the title is nonsense.
Done heaps of these but never applied plaster to the edges of patch and wall sheet which is a good idea, I always put stopping tape over and around the edges just to hide cracking which might occur around the edges in the future but nice job anyway.
Awww, I was hoping that you would continue with the kitchen tool theme and use kitchen spatulas to apply the mud ! Wonderful video, love the inserted piece of wood, thank you for sharing ,':*}
That's a heck of a lot of mud for that little hole! I bet that mason was STUNNED! Shocked/Flabbergasted and entertained as he surely had a few laughs as well!
Holy Mother Of God... what a time saver, it used to take me 60 seconds to do that cleaner with better results. I first thought this was a video from the 40's before razor knifes, pre-mixed mud, and about 100 better ways to do that. Was the 60 year-old in an assisted living center?
i usually make my repairs on the front side of the drywall not the back as when installed you would have to make a hole in the other side of the wall to get there
Materials €15, Kitchen utensils €40.... the look on someones face when they see you patching a 100mm square hole this way then re plastering half the wall......... priceless
Look up California wall patch. You should have made the square bigger than the hole then remove the gypsum from the paper an inch or so along all the edges and you have instant paper to embed and cover the seams.
Not sure why the guy was Stunned. This is actually the way I patched a hole in my wall make by a door knob a few weeks ago. Matter of fact it was recommended by the repair kit I bought at Home Depot. Except I did not use a pizza cutter to cut it or a electric saw. It worked perfectly. All that is new is the pizza cutter. Guess one could sharpen it up for the tool box. Might come in handy from time to time.
If only they sold rolling cutters... oh wait, look in the sewing section. Now for a drywall repair I have to travel to Home Depot, Joanne Fabrics, then get some cooking utensils...
Plus there's no plaster tape used so it could crack. For a more innovative patch look up the California patch, you don't cut off the paper off the bit your putting in, instead peeling off the drywall from the paper and using that like tape. No backing wood needed.
After working in food service for 24 years I can see how this is really handy when the chef goes ballistic for leaving meals in the service window and throws the tenderizing mallet through a wall.
This hurt my drywall eyes. Yes, this works....however, there is a much better process and less time consuming. I appreciate the video, just not a professional option.
I am also stunned. Stunned that this was so overly complicated and absurdly more involved than it needed to be.
He made a project outa of a small patch!
5 minutes? Somebody is having a laugh!
Rediculious right??... just screw the wood behind the hole, and mud it.
I agree
Right?
Thanks for the tip. This is so much easier than the potato masher and blender I usually use.
🤣🤣🤣🤣
😂😂😂
unfortunately , he cheated on 3:06 and used a regular tool !
😂
1-I am not 60 yet , nor a mason ever , but owl doubt any real masons ever got stunned by this dietary like process known forever , other than perhaps the sifting part to it.
2-And there is no need EVER to use a potato masher nor any of those to get messy utensils.Besides, I can tell you might be , or pretend to be a bad hombre , but surely as hell, God you are not.
3-Besides , the only real Mess i that you needs , specially so that young kids learn about motivation and excelling at school and later at work , so that the commie Chinese, nor any other thugs bent on world domination ever eat our lunch, IS the footballer, the soccer star and goat who came from Europe, after being born in Latin America and is now playing in sonny South Florida , whose first name is LIONel, or El Lion (a la ASLan) Messi, with his out of this world fabulously scoring and winning left foot...
4- ...Hear and heed for good, for these are ''as the days of Jonah'' when God beckons all to repentance Pronto!. Enough of the same old same old UNadulterated BS and ways of old.
5-Again, better that you and company... Shema!!!.
Having been in the Marine Corps, I was convinced that only they could take a simple project, no matter what it was, and overcomplicate it to the point of absurdity. However, after watching this video, I have witnessed absurdity brought to a new level.
yeah, I'm starting to think this guy did drywall for the federal government... 🤣
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣😳😳true!
Agreed, Govt tentacles such as Marine Corps are absolutely unnecessary and are created to overcome boredom of the young generation.
@@RingZero Okay, I didn’t say the Marine Corps wasn’t necessary, I just said that they have the ability to over complicate a lot of projects. To say that the Marine Corps isn’t necessary leads me to believe you never served in any branch of the service. If the day ever comes, you better hope the Marines haven’t gone anywhere.
we always tried to marine proof stuff
That was just about the most overly complicated way of patching drywall that I've ever seen. Instead of getting 2 tools dirty, he also got half the kitchen utensils dirty also. Plus he ripped a lot of paper off the backside of the drywall, which weakens it at that point. The fact that he didn't apply any type of seam tape over the edges means that it will crack and split in the near future causing more work.
I am just trying to figure out why he used so much mud for one patch. He covered almost the entire sheet of drywall.
Hahaha and it probably took him 4 hrs to get to the mud
He ended it with a 👍 though. You don’t end it with a 👍 unless you did a 👍 job!
Over complicated, yes... but the edges on a small repair like this wont crack and split without tape.
That's how he managed to stun the 60 year old mason
I am stunned. I always mix up in the saucepan, apply the flour paste with the tea towel, and flatten with the rolling pin. Pastry is good for smaller holes, though I do recommend baking it first for larger holes as he has done.
Wow. Unbelievable. Just use a razor knife. Today's society cracks me up.
And he swirled it way too much.
Pizza cutter?
Honestly if my husband used my kitchen tools for that, I would take away his man card, push him out of the way and show him the correct way to repair drywall. ( yes I can put up drywall, and mud and tape it too.)
*If you don't have any pastry you can use Digestive Biscuits instead.* I've discovered that two Digestives are precisely the same thickness as standard drywall. The only downside is that I had this really terrible day one Friday when I had to trim a client's hedge with a blunt pizza cutter, so after I'd finished I went to the pub and got absolutely blootered. When I rolled home at 1am I was ravenous but had no food at all in the house. I remembered I'd used the last of my Digestives the day before to put up a partition wall in the bedroom. I ended up eating half of my new wall and I can tell you that Magnolia emulsion tastes disgusting.
I'm a 20 year drywall finisher, and I'm stunned by how long that took.
Grâce à cette méthode,fini le chaumage 😂😂😂
A mon avis le gars,a toujours voulu être pizzaiolo 😂😂😂
@edntz of course the wood is needed. How are you going to superglue it when you cant even grab it on any side?
@edntz It supports the plug piece. Without it, the piece can easily drop into the wall or end up being crooked and not flush with the wall. And it will be weak and prone to damage again without the backing.
To long l can do it in 5 minutes 😴😎
This is so much better than the way I usually do it, with the pitchfork, corkscrew and toaster method. Thanks!
Hahahaha
Hahaha 😂😂
You have s toaster? Posh….
@snap-n-shoot Yeah, and it's a nice one too.
ja I was a little dissapointed he did not use a spatula for the clean up - (o: - very nice work - neat man
Im stunned,amazed and flabbergasted at how such a simple job can be made so complicated and half assed.
Well said
Yep and to think someone would make a video of such a crap job.
i want to know who this 60 year old mason is lol
😂
@@pablovonduckbill7802 maybe the OP of this comment? I think any mason would be stunned by the time wasting on this & pretty sure the cook of the house would be too with all their utensils pinched to be used in this project for no reason
Chuckled all the way through at the use of the kitchen gear! EXCELLENT repair.
Wow, never have I seen a simple job made more complicated.
I agree
That’s because his day / night job is a cook .
I was thinking that 😂😂
Absolutely! You don’t need to use your kitchen utensils, pizza cutter, and 50lbs of drywall mud lol. They actually make tools that will work much better. Ex. Utility knife, rasp, etc. I think the old man should stick to making cookies. Lol!😂
... next week, we show how to use the very same tools for a 20 minute home appendix removal !
Why use a putty knife when the cake spatula was in the kitchen drawer right next to the other gizmos?
LOL ... That's EXACTLY what I was thinking! 😂🤣😂
@Shakin' Abe I saw pizza cutter and nutmeg grater. 🤯🤪😵💫
Don't be silly. You'd use a pizza dough blade for that.
Must be an Chef 😅
Should have used an egg timer also. That's a long 5 minutes
As a Fibrous Plasterer, this is such an easy repair. Some casting plater soaked jute scrim to form a wad fills the hole. Then as the plaster steady's, fill out until roughly level then bring to a finish with a joint rule or busk. That is a 5 minute repair.
Judging by his kitchen tools I think he's a chef, not a mason.
😂😂😂😂😂😂Lol
😂😂😂
Not a mason a drywaller. Masons work with brick and mortar.
My thoughts exactly
my cats name is Mason
I was stunned too by this method. Stunned by the use of wrong tools for the job and how complicated it was made. 😂
I agree
And he's doing all of this to the wrong side of the drywall.
What a wasted video, this is so asinine it has to be a joke....
@@SwapPartLLC
Wow! Wrong on so many levels…..
Love that this video has no annoying background music or over-friendly voice narrating it step by step. What a relief! Silence is good!
It is hypnotic
Truly
@hopehadley8844
> Love that this video has no annoying background music or
> over-friendly voice narrating it step by step. What a relief!
>
>Silence is good!
And if the silence had been accompanied by 4:37 of a plain black rectangle as the video, it would have been even better!
That's because everyone watching/ filming him was too pre-occupied with holding in their laughter, placing side bets on what stupid kitchen utensil he would use next and estimating the longevity of this "repair" to narrate.
This is the way pretty much everyone repairs holes in drywall only not with kitchen tools. The only other thing was the use of hot glue. I just put the same mud on the support stick I use on the rest of the project. I have also seen others just drive a screw through the patch piece. It is a good idea to adhere or fasten the patch to the support because it helps prevent cracking of the edges over time.
@pookatim...I agree, making the patch stronger than the surrounding wall, but he also didn't use seam tape which over time could show cracks around patch.
he might use a shovel, and cement mixer to make his dinner.
Very interested to see this, as I had the same idea about a week ago, only I used two pieces of wood and no glue between the wood and the plasterboard. Maybe it would be stronger, if one used the same technique on the join between the patch and the drywall, that one uses to join two pieces of plasterboard, i.e. bevel both edges to make a groove between the two pieces and fill it with jointing plaster, finish it off with fibreglass roving and then finish plaster over it. That should be stronger.
If you don't want the piece of wood left inside, one can put the wood outside and screw it down to two curly plastic inserts inserted in the drywall and two in the the inserted piece of plasterboard. then, you fill the groove between the insert and the wall except for where the wood obstructs you. When the plaster is set, you can remove the wood and the curly inserts and finish plastering. (Sorry! I do not know the proper English term for the curly plastic inserts that you can screw into plasterboard to hold a screw.)
@@antonywooster6783 there is no good reason to not just put the board inside though... Mudding around the board on the outside just to remove that board And md some more just seems like a waste of time. No offense...
@@harryberry474q
Wife: "honey, have you seen my whisk, cheese grater, pizza cutter, & strainer? "
Me: "no, sorry"
probably next to the kitchen shears - - - uh, wherever they are !!
I thought that was a pizza cutter...but thought nah, it can't be.😅
Typical sexist comment
As an electrician I would cut a hole in drywall to fit a electrical box. Alongside the edge of the hole I would secure a piece of wood with No 6 fine drywall screws. Then put the box in and screw it to the wood.
In renovations I would cut 4 inch diameter round holes with a hole saw in drywall. Save the round pieces of drywall. Then I could fish my wires through the area. Later I put in a piece of wood inside the drywall in the middle of the hole. Then I screwed the round pieces onto the wood. After that it is easy to apply drywall compound and hide the hole. This is the best way to fish wires through existing walls. Just cut a series of round holes with a hole saw throughout the areas where you fishing your wires through.
I am a 60 year old mason,and the last thing this video did was amaze me .😂
Same, other than the statement that "a 60 year old mason was stunned by this."
A 60yr mason can be stunned only if he lives in Groundhog Day since 16yr...
I was really hoping to see the dough roller demonstrated to really smooth it out.
What will happen if you were really hoping to see the dough roller demonstrating to really smooth it out?
@@cameronbateau6510 Well heck that'd mean I get a new kitchen gadget added to my toolbox.
When a baker does drywall. Got the sifted cornstarch, the icing, the whisk, the pizza wheel... "Where do you get your tools? Home Depot?" "No, Sur La Table"
More complicated than needed to be.A lot more than a 5 minute fix.
Correct. Stanley knife, PVA adhesive, filler, putty knife. Done.
Yep, I had to chuckle the "60 year old mason was stunned by the method". However, he probably was stunned to see such a goofy way of doing it. HAHAHA
@@CB-xr1egyou must mean “be. A lot”. .. No proofreading award for you
@@SophieBird07 I know what I mean and I was correct with what I typed. Please don't interfere, especially as you are wrong. He typed *Alot* and it should have been *a lot*
@@CB-xr1eg Find better things to argue A bout.
A 60 year old mason would absolutely be stunned if he saw you doing that. And would probably say something like, "What the hell are you doing? I'm not a drywaller but even I know that's wrong. Stop wasting time, grab the right tools and hurry up and do it right or get out of the way and let someone else do it."
I was just thinking stunned that he was a plasterer for 42 years while thinking he was a mason🤣 perhaps he's a funny handshake mason🤣👍
some one turned up at a building site, for brick laying, with a garden trowel, for some reason, he did'nt get the job.
I think this man was a brick mason, it clearly stated that so his tools wouldn't do the job. But looked like a home repair in his own home. You use what's on hand. It did the job so why all y'all pros critiquing his work?
Let's see your video of building a floor to ceiling brick fireplace.
@@montamiddleton9318 Where exactly does it state that the person doing this video is a brick mason, Or that he's at home, or that these is the only tools he has? Watch some of his other videos, they're all like this. And he has more tools. It's all in good fun. Now get down off that big ole tall horsey and go get a hug.
@@terrynunya7444 Exactly! The man has a sense of humor unlike the snobs in this thread!
I usually patch drywall doing something similar to this, though it varies depending on what materials I have around. I do find that I get a very smooth patch with very little sanding if I mud 2 vertical strips of mesh tape, then once they are hard and smooth, overlay 2 horizontal strips over the top and bottom gaps. That way, there is a screed going around the perimeter to guide the knife while filling in the center.
I was a Painter/Handyman and sometimes I had to repair Drywall holes. Your method works to perfection. The way I did it was get a piece of Drywall and pollyfilla it and stick it from the inside. leave for the rest of the day then next day fill in completely with Pollyfilla then let it dry then sand and paint wall.
Typical painter!
Эх
Well there goes four and a half minutes of my life I’ll never getting back.
You clicked on it and stayed in there watching long enough to lose those minutes you are never getting back
His method is a good, solid way to do it. He just left out the important part of using tape. To make the patch go quicker use self sticking mesh tape over the joint and 20 minute hot mud.
Isn't there a visible rim from the mesh tape then ( level)? Can I repair a hole in a drywall ceiling with this method? Is mesh tape really necessary to repair a 9 cm hole?
This is how I was taught by a contractor at Hunter Army Airfield back in 1995. I'm a female and was 23 at the time. I was actually pretty good at it. I still prefer this method, excluding the cooking utensils.
Yeah, the next he baked a cake it was hard as a rock, and tasted like sh💩t....
So you're 52 now and still using the most inefficient method on UA-cam?
I think a lot of real masters are "stunned" by such technologies 😁
What will happen if a lot of real masters are stunned by such technologies?
@@cameronbateau6510 For the master, this poses no threat except humor.
I used this method but found it very difficult to patch the back of the drywall in that 4" space inside the wall. Next time, I'll try patching the front where all the texture, paint, and finishing is.
I could only imagine what my co workers would say if I showed up with kitchen utensils to do dry wall with 😂😂
Probably would ask to have some of what you’re smoking… after seeing your work they’d still want to smoke with you but also would be curious as to which isle the kitchen utensils are found on
I use a utility knife to slice my pizza.
They'd ask you where the nearest gay bar is.
You know, to have COCKtails after work.
@@seeharvesterweird comment
@@josephhertzberg2734
Want me to mansplain it to you?
Fix-It-All Patching Compound, butterfly patch, 5-10 minutes to set, then finishing compound.
lol guess we can use culinary tools for drywall as well 😂 Very versatile! This is a very smart method! In maintenance I have had plenty of times where I will use shim boards behind Sheetrock to anchor to so I don’t have to cut all the away to the studs.
I never saw the back side of drywall finished before. Great job, laugh out loud.
I never seen anyone type out lol
@@ProfessorProstate Spell check corrects and substitutes. Lol
Lol @@ProfessorProstate
It's for the rats and mice to admire
@@ProfessorProstate Ha!
I've patched maybe a few hundred holes kinda like this. Here's what I learned: you don't need a pizza cutter. A razor knife will do the same thing. Every drywaller has one of those. I would have used two plywood strips to cover the corners, but what he did will probably be ok. Some paper tape would have been good. With an area the size he covered, it will be easy to hide. I've NEVER sifted my hot mud. But maybe I'll try it next time. ( I'm retired, so probably not.) Do you need kitchen tools to patch drywall ? I never did. I reduced my tool inventory for this sort of thing to what I could fit into a mud pan. I'll give this three stars for clear demonstration.
I agree, Down the road ths type of patch will more than likely crack
They're using kitchen tools to troll and get more comments. Just like the wall turned into MDF at the end. All about trolling now, sadly.
Just bevel the hole edges at 45 degree and same (but opposite facing) bevel the patch edges. Then NO need for strips or screws and the patch can't be pushed in as it's backed all around by the beveled edges.
I forgot that part about sifting. From now on I'll sift all the powder used in construction or repair.
Maybe the Mason should stick to Mason worn and not drywall work. Don't use a jigsaw on drywall, you have pipes and electrical cabled back there. Use a razor knife and make shallow cuts until you feel it fut through the back paper on the drywall. Put your blocking on the edges, not the center of the hole so there is support where it's needed.
I been a licensed builder for 29 years and I would have done this a little different for sure. This was the slow way.
this is a DIY. few people want to pay hundreds to a 'licensed builder' to repair a small hole in the wall.
😂, yeah not the most efficient....
I think he knows that
I always use a slice of stale brown bread for patching, less suction. This method saved me so much time. Why I never think of these beats me
I have a weird feeling this takes more than 5 minutes
If you speed up the video, the instruction takes less than 5 minutes, but the task still takes an hour or so 🙂
It’s takes more than 5 minutes to go through the kitchen cabinet drawer to fine cooking utensils. A hand drywall saw or utility knife works no need to drag out a jig saw. I always use drywall tape, each to there on
Great use of kitchen utensils! 👍🏿
Not sure why all the kitchen gadgets, but it looks good. Can I ask why you didn't screw the new piece onto the wood piece you added. Would that have added support?
He could of just mushed a blocked of melted mozzarella around his fill peice n popped it in then cominecd to mudding
@marrerofamilyfarm
> Can I ask why you didn't screw the new piece onto the wood piece you added.
I'm guessing the vegetable knife with a pointed end was in the dishwasher.
And the mud over patch only ended up 20 times larger than the drywall patch. Impressive.
😂
Use a utility knife to cut the square out vs a jigsaw and to cut the rear paper. Seemed like you tore the rear part of the paper which weakened the rear part of the drywall. Why use hot glue when you could use one screw to hold the patch? I only use hot glue when screws cannot be used. I also like to use Fibafuse on any open seam.
I use the wood method on larger holes, except I use two for more support.
Then I use screws to attach the drywall to the wood. The glue thing is a waste of time.
Although, thanks to UA-cam my patches may still use the wood supports I will use the ‘California’ method for the patch itself.
WOW! The bit of baton was the only thing that was done properly! 1 - Fix the baton(s) for support. 2 - Measure hole and cut a bit of plaster board / drywall a couple of mm smaller. 3 - Screw piece of plaster board to the baton(s), 4 - Cover gaps with mesh tape (so as not to crack, the video shows a potential for a hairline crack as there is no mesh tape.) . 5 Fill over patch with filler and remember to feather it out so not to notice. Always remember there are a lot of people on youtube looking legit but don't do things the right way.
When a chef does drywall repair or your drywall guy forgets his tools and digs into your kitchen drawers. How did that patch get so big?
It is very interesting to use kitchen utilities. I would never do a carrot shedder or a gravy stirrer to repair the wall, but I have second thoughts now!!😮
As a 69 year old mason I was not very stunned 😮watching this.
Maybe stunned but not in a good way 😂
I was stunned by how bad it was.
Wouldn't two back supports--one at each edge, either top and bottom or left and right--be better?
no, only holds the plug in place till it sets, but it needs to be taped or more simplky just do a california patch, much stronger and won't crack like this
Shoot! All this time I thought using my paper plate method was the way to go but...after seeing this technology wow learn something new every day. Thanks you sir you are a real contribution to our society.
As a professional drywall finisher, this very well may have been the most painful thing I've ever seen. I'll probably need a therapist...
You will have nightmares forever.
Emeril Lagasse found a new career. Never realized a basic drywall patch would be stunning to anyone.
Bam!
60 years olde mason should no be shocked 😮
This was common for the high school home economics class. Perfect use of kitchen tools.
💯 A➕
Just thinking about the quickest and best way to repair some wall by a new doorway. Perfect solution. Thanks.
I’ve done that same patch a lot up until I saw the edge (mortaring idea) and the glue on the wood. Good ideas although I do like wood behind the corners. Good video!
wood on two (or 4) corners - I like that better too.
@@RobertTozzi I agree.
@@RobertTozzi the reason I put wood on all 4 corners is what if it’s just across the center. If someone bumps the wall there with not much pressure it’ll break the patch easily.
@@subforceusa694I agree with you need to put more back in wood in there
What will happen if you have done the same patch a lot up until you saw the edge mortaring idea?
Where I come from, the brown paper is always the backside (wall cavity side) of gypsum board / drywall, so by the time I pulled the drywall off the opposite side of the wall (to access the brown side of the sheet, then hung new drywall, finished, textured and re-painted it. There was a lot more work required and it was really expensive. 🤣🤪🤓 AI
Should have first used a garlic press to get the clumps out of the powder... then a food processor to mix it with the water. Also, pro tip... use a toaster to heat up the joint compound... makes it spread smooth like butter.
Perfect. I was near perfect before doing about 90%. I never bothered buttering both the edges of the hole and plug piece. Also, I screw the patch to the wood, but hot glue is a nice touch.
Hot melt glue acts like a shim and holds the patch peace proud, one screw is best.
What will happen if you were near perfect before doing about 90 percent?
Bet the wife was thrilled to see this….at least she now knows where to look for the missing kitchen utensils…….
How do you know he doesn't have his own set?
@@denisebrucato9073 yeah right….
That was amazing. Is there any possible way to repair an 8" x 12" hole the plumber made through the shower tile and backer board without having to replace entire shower wall? Thanks
If you weren't going to bother about using tape on the points you should have at least put a Piece of wood on each side too Fasten 2.
Two would be better for sure but it will still hold. Tape not needed. He should have spritzed the gypsum core around the edges for a better bond. But will still hold.
Mason was stunned! The drywall was installed backwards and the repair took longer then needed!
What will happen if the drywall was installed backwards?
@cameronbateau6510 you have an unfinished cardboard surface that's unpaintable. So I'd you want it finished you'd need to skim coat the whole thing and basically do a ton more work that needed.
A quality method of fixing the unwanted foremen magnum from an old socket , many thanks .👍
Instead of sanding, making a big mess. Use a damp sponge. It works great, get the wall smooth as silk.
Damp sponge you can't control the grit. Your at the mercy of your sponge and water.
I swear sometimes the damp sponge makes the mud soft again a little bit. I like sanding sponges to control the dust, but it seems like they can do the same. My preference is dry-sanding.
I like the idea of support from behind. That's smart!
You HAVE to support it from behind.
@@armyvet8279 not all the times. Depends on the hole size you can leave an extras of front facing paper applying it like a "plug"
Not new there is easier way just using a piece of drywall cutting
It was fixed using that support board already
A few years ago after we moved into our house I started patching holes around the house. The time it took to patch about 20 plus holes took half the time this took to patch that one hole. And yes some holes needed new drywall replaced.
I'm sure that the only people stunned were those that knew the right way to do a repair such as that! And, what's with the pizza cutter? Plus, he gave a big thumbs up at the end, as well! 😅
Who knew I have been storing all my best tools in the kitchen drawer.
I am not an expert, but have done my own remodeling for a long time. This is similar to what I have done, but is a slight enhancement. Instead of the piece of wood, I used a piece of drywall, which means I had to wait for the mud glue to dry. The wood and screws would be faster... But I usually have other things to do, so no matter.
I'm pretty sure this is just an elaborate joke targeting all the overly complicated "life hacks" that are circulating these days.
It encourages comments and hence views
Don't you need tape to avoid cracks later? Just wondering.
This might not crack because it's so small the surrounding drywall is all one piece, but I always use tape just to be on the safe side.
I usually cut away the damaged section, then back the hole with hardboard, epoxied to the undamaged drywall. You can hold it in place by drilling two small holes into the hardboard, passing a loop of cord through the holes, then tying the cord and passing a stick or something through the cord. Turning the stick tightens the cord and hence pulls the hardboard against the drywall and holds it in position while the epoxy sets. then just cut the cord, cut a piece of drywall roughly to-shape and fill in with paste. Dead easy and you can then mount anything onto the previously damaged section of wall because it is now backed with hardboard. Works like a charm and especially useful when the hole was torn by a failed fixture that needs to be reinstalled to the same location.
Why would anyone be stunned by this? It is the standard method to patch a hole drywall. Certainly this is a useful 'how to' video but the title is nonsense.
Done heaps of these but never applied plaster to the edges of patch and wall sheet which is a good idea, I always put stopping tape over and around the edges just to hide cracking which might occur around the edges in the future but nice job anyway.
The mason was stunned because the repairman used so many kitchen utensils
Is this drywall repair or a cooking show? Pizza cutter, tea strainer, cheesegrater, whisk?
Awww, I was hoping that you would continue with the kitchen tool theme and use kitchen spatulas to apply the mud !
Wonderful video, love the inserted piece of wood, thank you for sharing ,':*}
Using the pizza wheel is a very logical idea for me since most of my pizzas have the taste and texture of drywall.
That's a heck of a lot of mud for that little hole! I bet that mason was STUNNED! Shocked/Flabbergasted and entertained as he surely had a few laughs as well!
What happens whenever house moves and there’s no tape on the joints😊
Thanks for sharing the glue idea on the patch board was a good one. I’m going to try that on a hole in my shop
I can’t believe he didn’t use a rolling pin to flatten it out
Thank you! Looks fantastic. I love hot gluing it also to that brace! Very helpful! ❤
Holy Mother Of God... what a time saver, it used to take me 60 seconds to do that cleaner with better results. I first thought this was a video from the 40's before razor knifes, pre-mixed mud, and about 100 better ways to do that. Was the 60 year-old in an assisted living center?
i usually make my repairs on the front side of the drywall not the back as when installed you would have to make a hole in the other side of the wall to get there
Materials €15, Kitchen utensils €40.... the look on someones face when they see you patching a 100mm square hole this way then re plastering half the wall......... priceless
A frosting spatula or butter knife would have been better than those putty knives. And your ad photo showed a tea leaf strainer. Why wasn’t that used?
Look up California wall patch. You should have made the square bigger than the hole then remove the gypsum from the paper an inch or so along all the edges and you have instant paper to embed and cover the seams.
Well considering the video is 4:36 and there are obvious jump cuts and speed-shifts.... I call a BIG pile of B. Ess click bait...
Not sure why the guy was Stunned. This is actually the way I patched a hole in my wall make by a door knob a few weeks ago. Matter of fact it was recommended by the repair kit I bought at Home Depot. Except I did not use a pizza cutter to cut it or a electric saw. It worked perfectly. All that is new is the pizza cutter. Guess one could sharpen it up for the tool box. Might come in handy from time to time.
My husband did the same thing! Not a new trick!
If only they sold rolling cutters... oh wait, look in the sewing section. Now for a drywall repair I have to travel to Home Depot, Joanne Fabrics, then get some cooking utensils...
Plus there's no plaster tape used so it could crack. For a more innovative patch look up the California patch, you don't cut off the paper off the bit your putting in, instead peeling off the drywall from the paper and using that like tape. No backing wood needed.
After working in food service for 24 years I can see how this is really handy when the chef goes ballistic for leaving meals in the service window and throws the tenderizing mallet through a wall.
This hurt my drywall eyes. Yes, this works....however, there is a much better process and less time consuming. I appreciate the video, just not a professional option.
What is the better process, could you pls share?
This repair will only lead to a much larger hole in the wall when his wife finds out what he’s been doing with her kitchen utensils. 😵💫
LOL!
Blooming amazing. Best repair vid ever. Single lady greedy cook attempting DIY 😂❤
Hole in the wall again! Time to redo the entire wall!!! 😂
Nice 👍👍
Dude that was a simple patch turned into a science project!!
As a Mason. I'm flabbergasted... By how wrong that is 😂
😂 bet he uses a Stanley knife to cut pizza 🍕
Betty Croker should give this a 5 star rating and include it in her new recipe manual!
Mason needs to get out more! Oldest trick in the book
That took a lot longer than 5 minutes. Never seen so many kitchen items used for DIY, pizza cutter, cheese grater, egg whisk, flour sieve??? brilliant