I also like how he goes through all the steps in detail - and explains everything. Most DIY shows on tv are edited and you don't really learn anything that way. Great job Shannon - I am your newest fan.
Watched this video and the one on how to remove a non load bearing wall and went into my new storefront and removed the room that I was going to pay someone $1200 to remove on Monday! It took us 4 hours on Saturday! Thanks Guys! Definitely my go to on DIY!!
I’m a first time home owner with ZERO experience on anything outside of welding and these videos help A LOT. This is as close to someone being there with me doing this as it gets 😂 really appriciate the thorough walkthroughs!
Well since the video it's been 8 years later did u learn anything or did you even finish that dry wall job or did you sit your ass on the couch with a beer ? Bob told me to ask !
Very good instructional and DIY video! Tools required: 1 x cutter 1x drywall saw 1 x hammer 1 x crate opener as wedge or anything but not your fingers! 1 x safety glass 1 x dust mask 1 x electrical screwdriver to remove the plug outlet Maybe hand gloves too to prevent cuts. And of coz, cleaning and disposal of drywall parts in the end.
Thank you... I'm in my 50's and just got a small house. The basement has some dry wall that I want to remove and most likely will have to do it myself because, I can't pay anyone to do it.. The way you explained has helped and inspired me that I can do this myself... Again, thank you.
You may want to take note of where you used your saw and after removing drywall if there was an area close to wiring as in this wall check the wiring to make sure you did not damage it.
I wish I saw this earlier. Especially the tip about cutting the corner paper with a knife. Thank you for sharing your knowledge. I would suggest tipping the outlet down so dust can't fall into it. Also, as someone mentioned earlier, to be safe, I would check the cable for damage at the location where the saw cut across.
Whenever I have a project in mind, you're the first one I go to for quality, concise, excellent information. Everything I do according to your instructions has worked out perfectly! I like the way you describe the "process" in its entirety using every possible scenario when possible. Thank you for all your efforts and sharing your talents with all of us!
Good work Shannon. I always wear a dust mask when I do this kind of work on my house. I have been blessed/cursed with an older house built by the original owner who obviously thought he was a master carpenter. He was most definitely not. A dust mask can also protect you from mouse doo-doo inside the walls. That stuff can be bad news. keep up the work. Your videos are extremely helpful.
I love your videos! My husband and I purchased a fixer upper and your videos have been so helpful to us! This weekend we are tearing out Sheetrock and insulation in the basement. The previous owner “finished” the basement and never sealed the concrete 🤦🏻♀️ this will make our demo much smoother!!
this is a great way to do it neatly. but when you are doing a full interior demolition of a house you have to work way faster. if the back was exposed, hit the drywall from the back where the nails or screws where and the while sheet will come off
I want to appreciate the video didn't just ram a sledge hammer into the wall like they always show on the home network TV. Thank you so much for posting this!!! I feel way more confident now.
He wears the exact same shade of blue collar shirt that I do!! Love it!! No nonsense talk - in order to make a lengthy video - rather, he’s straight to the point with USEFUL TIPS, and not proclaiming to be “captain obvious”. Off to Menards so I can get me a drywall saw and climb a stack of 2x4s!!
This is a really great video. Very informative step by step. I'm a complete novice when it comes to this so now I know all the precautions even though many of it seems to be common sense it's always good to have all bases covered before proceeding. Gonna continue see if there's a video on how to insulate walls. Thanks again!
Good stuff. I like that it was more thought out than how HGTV makes it look by getting a sledge hammer and running through the wall like the Kool Aid man. This will help me demo the terrible drywall in my basement.
Thanks Shannon, your video was very helpful and saved me from the typical mistakes an amateur makes going in blind. Great tips on safety & methodology along with your characteristically friendly attitude to top-off the video. Much appreciated.
In California where I live you have to have the sheetrock inspected after it's hung and before mud and tape (because of earthquake standards). They wouldn't be very happy to see edge nails and glue. 12/4 is mostly the nail pattern here. But the glue sure made taking it down a breeze, and took care of that wall paper removal in the process...
Excellent video. I am going to tear out two kitchen walls this weekend. I assumed by watching the DIY t.v. shows that I was going to just hammer away at the walls to remove the old drywall. But doing it your way is better. Then I can have new plumbing and electrical completed which will make my kitchen renovation much easier.
This was a very informative video I would have never thought of pulling drywall off like that I would have just took a hammer and start hacking holes and pulling it a part. which would have been more Messier then the way you done it
Thank you very much for this video. Someone put normal drywall in the bathroom with flat paint. 40 years later, it is paper thin. Plus, moisture from the tub has gotten up in the dryway so I need to replace it. This is very helpful and gives me confidence to do it myself. Unfortunately for me, there is plumbing and a tile counter/sink and toilet in the way lol. Oh and I subscribed.
Don't forget to protect finishes that will remain from drywall dust.... that stuff is viscious. A box of painters plastic and a couple rolls of tape will save you lots of cleanup time.
Shannon we often take a reciprocating saw with a shortened blade so you don't cut electrical wires and then cut the drywall between the studs allowing us to just rip off the strips. I would like to see what you do when it is time to tape at the ceiling. PS check out the wallboarders buddy drywall cutter. I just finished off a whole house for the first time in 40 years. There were 120 corner beads to set and 8" window returns throughout the house as the house has 14" thick walls. It sure made the job easier
Just found your videos recently. Thank you for the clear explanations and letting us know what to expect. It really takes the worry out of DIY! I will be lookin at your channel first for my home improvement tasks. Thank you!
Thank you for showing me how to remove drywall. I had a leak in bathroom and had to replace floors and walls and tiles. Your video was very helpful and gave me the confidence to handle the job. Thank you again
I really appreciate you sharing your knowledge Shannon. Your videos are awesome. I plan on installing new windows in my home and all your videos have been super helpful. Thanks for sharing your knowledge with us.
And what about the top left corner of drywal you left hanging there? I was waiting to see how you would tear that part out since you didn't cut it with the knife and it would have perhaps torn the drywal above the doorway.
Thanks so much! I'm trying to figure out how to rip out the small entry walls to our small kitchen pantry. I wanted to put cabinets in to replace the pantry. Very interesting. Now I have to make sure they aren't loadbearing...Thanks again.
I am wondering why there were no screws in the drywall field; then I saw you had glue. Good video but it is not the same for me.For me, I will use a magnet to find the screws then mark them and remove them before removing the panel. Nice tip for scoring the joins to the ceiling.
Excellent video, Shannon, thanks! I wondered if you'd get around to mentioning the issue of drywall (gypsum) dust. It's particularly fine-grained stuff, not something you want in your lungs. At the end of your video, you mention the idea of wearing a dust mask-but maybe it'd be a good idea to add something about that at the beginning instead. I'm just thinking that some people may not watch all the way to the end, and it's something they really should be careful about if they'll be working with much drywall at all.
I saw the glue spots but it doesn't look like it did a very good job at holding the sheetrock on the wall, otherwise you would have had a hell of a time getting it off not to mention all the scraping you would have to do to clean up the studs before putting up new sheetrock.
I'm So scared 😭to do some renovations on a home that was destroyed maliciously/out of spite. I also am equally afraid to throw money away with general contractors and tradesmen who have made it an industry practice to take advantage of female clients. So.. .I'm watching these videos and hoping it combines with my previous construction/carpentry experience from a family business (that closed when the relative passed away) and my natural intellect to get the work done and done right 👍😏😇🌞
Sheet rock and dry wall is so cheap. First thing I did when I bought my house was rip ALL OF IT away. Reinforced all the studs by making them sections of 3, instead of 1. Put support beams going accross. And added 3/4s inch ply with sheet metal attached to the outside to it. Such a house can withstand tornado weather, and flying debries like it's nothing. Also anchor all floors down to the conccrete base of the house. Was it expensive? yes. worth it? yes. Yu have security in your place, and you don't have any fear AT ALL of any huricane, or weather of any kind. DOing this to a small rancher home btw makes it allot easier. It would take much more time to do it to multi level places. But it can be done.
I used a multi tool to cut a straighter line, and partially through, then I used the knife to cut. I was having issues cutting with the knife, due to there being osb board behind the drywall.
Sort of unrelated, but how would you possibly replace that drywall and handle that edge with the popcorn ceiling which you appear to be trying to save?
How do you know where to stop demolition on the ends? On the right side, I imagine you can remove the corner bead and install a new one after you replace the panel you removed (or maybe keep the corner bead and slip the new panel under it?) The left side is more tricky in my mind. I read you are not suppose to align panel edges with the edge of an opening (door opening, window opening, closet opening/arch), because cracks are likely to develop in the corner. So where do you stop removing drywall on the left around the arch, if you only want to remove the drywall that you showed being removed and not anymore around the top of the arch? Thank you!!
Matt de Oliveira You can use a vacuum panel saw. They are quite expensive, but you can insert a vacuum hose into it and eliminate any dust created from the cut. It will also cut right through those metal beads on the corners and has adjustable depth.
I need to remove 12inches from the floor up only. I am having a basement waterproofing company in and they need access 1ft up. Any tips? Would there be a power tool to use as I have about 24 ft I have to remove
I usually poke holes in the drywall with ah hammer, then rip down the pieces. this method seems so much better. Trying it out this week on an electrical Repair.
Hi I have a question, sorry it is not about the wall, but the ceiling in this video. I have the same type of rough ceiling and I want to have a smooth one. Can you please let me know what is that on the ceiling and how shall I tackle it, shall I simply cover it with cement or something, or sand it. Would really appreciate your answer
Thank you, but I dont think it will work. (I will try though). We have it in the bathroom, wouldn't it collapse by now if it easily removed with just water. Also I think it is painted on.
+Bab Vladimirova there's a big difference between ambient moisture from shower use and direct application of water from a sprayer followed by scraping. It will work. Just make sure you use a straight, sharp (i.e. not old and abused) drywall knife.
My house is from 1923. Except for the kitchen in the bathroom all the other walls are plastered. I want to take the drywall down in my bathroom, what if there is Plaster under the drywall? And since it is the bathroom is there a certain drywall I should get to replace the old?
Great video Shannon! Why would the receptacle have a red wire connected to it? White for 14-2 and yellow for 12-2. I thought red was reserved for 12-2 heating wire only.
there will likely be a poly air/vapour barrier between the drywall and insulation if its an exterior wall or ceiling so be careful not to damage it or at least fix or replace it afterwards.
i have a bit of a complicated question: i need to take down the drywall from my basement bathroom but i would like to extend the bathroom a bit into the boiler room to create enough space for a stand in shower. will taking some space from the boiler room cause a problem? and will removing the studs and remaking the frame for the bathroom disturb the floor above? and how do i remove the 2x4s of that wall? thanks
I need to have some drywall removed in my finished basement to access the foundation wall for a crack. Initially I thought I would have to pay someone but I think I can handle this. The time to actually do it is my concern.
Hi Shannon how do you remove the drywall screws from the studs? The screw heads will have dry mud in them. Great videos by the way. Subscribed and liked!
Is this today's more traditional drywall? I have a part of a wall I want to take off to put up drywall, but it appears to be the old fashioned stuff that feels almost more rough, like stucco or even a concrete mix. Can you take it off the same way? That is is you even know what I am talking about, given I am not quite sure how to describe it! I tried taking off face (fake?) brick thinking it might snap off, but the surface behind is coming off with it leaving huge gaps. Therefore, it seems to make sense just to remove the whole thing and start again. Not a super big area. Smaller than the one you were working on.
You may have lath and plaster? Come to the forum with your question and maybe a picture and I could help from there. www.house-improvements.com/forums/
Are you at all worried about asbestos in the drywall or popcorn ceiling when removing it? I found out my drywall seams and popcorn ceiling in my 1972 house has 1-5% asbestos in the drywall. Any tips or thoughts?
Mike Lang there is some concern in homes built before the late 90s. the risk in my opinion is slim but never the less it is a risk. wearing a respirator could help.
I drilled a hole on the stud in the ceiling to reroute my internet installation and I think I hit a wire when I did. I just wanted to go behind the wall to make it look professional. I tripped a circuit and later got the breaker to go back on but I have no power in 3 rooms. There was a wire in the attic but I stayed away from it. I am thinking that who ever wired my house followed the stud right directly below the ceiling and dropped down when they made it to the outlet or ceiling fixtures
not trying to downgrade you video but! my dads a 33 year red seal carpenter i'm starting my first year in carpentry through his company, and we had to strip a wall to the studs, and we did it in one piece. and what we did was much faster and easyer(you punch two hand holes between the studs, cut the tape joints on top and sides, grab firmly in the hand holes, shake back and forth drywall will coming in one piece not 5 xD
+ColdFire MC Yup I'm sure it worked fine, You have a younger back than me,LOL. I have learned working by myself that a few extra trips is easier usually than carrying large pieces. Good tip though. Good luck in your career!
Its fantastic that new DIYers like myself can get on UA-cam and learn from people like you. Thanks so much.
I liked your video, it helped me a lot, thank you.
I also like how he goes through all the steps in detail - and explains everything. Most DIY shows on tv are edited and you don't really learn anything that way.
Great job Shannon - I am your newest fan.
The second I heard the Canadian accent. I knew I could trust this guy. Thanks
yamster88 how do you differentiate the Canadian accent
@@bekabeka71 listen to him say no. it's more like in between know and knew.
Beck's it's pretty damn subtle, but if you've lived in Canada you can spot it.
Yes,the canadians. So trustworthy. Mega racist and politicians addicted to crack
@@Kyle-cv3de Chill lmao, no one asked for your hot take lol
Watched this video and the one on how to remove a non load bearing wall and went into my new storefront and removed the room that I was going to pay someone $1200 to remove on Monday! It took us 4 hours on Saturday! Thanks Guys! Definitely my go to on DIY!!
One wall, removed by someone who knows, versus yourself for free watching a you tube video , noticing the double plate at the top...?🤪🤔😳
I’m a first time home owner with ZERO experience on anything outside of welding and these videos help A LOT. This is as close to someone being there with me doing this as it gets 😂 really appriciate the thorough walkthroughs!
Well since the video it's been 8 years later did u learn anything or did you even finish that dry wall job or did you sit your ass on the couch with a beer ? Bob told me to ask !
Very good instructional and DIY video!
Tools required:
1 x cutter
1x drywall saw
1 x hammer
1 x crate opener as wedge or anything but not your fingers!
1 x safety glass
1 x dust mask
1 x electrical screwdriver to remove the plug outlet
Maybe hand gloves too to prevent cuts.
And of coz, cleaning and disposal of drywall parts in the end.
Thank you... I'm in my 50's and just got a small house. The basement has some dry wall that I want to remove and most likely will have to do it myself because, I can't pay anyone to do it.. The way you explained has helped and inspired me that I can do this myself... Again, thank you.
You may want to take note of where you used your saw and after removing drywall if there was an area close to wiring as in this wall check the wiring to make sure you did not damage it.
I wish I saw this earlier. Especially the tip about cutting the corner paper with a knife. Thank you for sharing your knowledge. I would suggest tipping the outlet down so dust can't fall into it. Also, as someone mentioned earlier, to be safe, I would check the cable for damage at the location where the saw cut across.
Always remeber to score the corners! 👍
Whenever I have a project in mind, you're the first one I go to for quality, concise, excellent information. Everything I do according to your instructions has worked out perfectly! I like the way you describe the "process" in its entirety using every possible scenario when possible. Thank you for all your efforts and sharing your talents with all of us!
+Wendy Diestel Thanks Wendy, please share your experience with all your friends,family and co workers so they can use our information as well.
+HouseImprovements absolutely! Thanks for taking the time to respond ❤️
This man is OOZING Canadian! 😂
Good work Shannon. I always wear a dust mask when I do this kind of work on my house. I have been blessed/cursed with an older house built by the original owner who obviously thought he was a master carpenter. He was most definitely not. A dust mask can also protect you from mouse doo-doo inside the walls. That stuff can be bad news. keep up the work. Your videos are extremely helpful.
MrToolmaker23 ja
Thanks, made me realize I was doing it the hard way with a utility knife rather than a drywall saw
I love your videos! My husband and I purchased a fixer upper and your videos have been so helpful to us! This weekend we are tearing out Sheetrock and insulation in the basement. The previous owner “finished” the basement and never sealed the concrete 🤦🏻♀️ this will make our demo much smoother!!
this is a great way to do it neatly. but when you are doing a full interior demolition of a house you have to work way faster. if the back was exposed, hit the drywall from the back where the nails or screws where and the while sheet will come off
I want to appreciate the video didn't just ram a sledge hammer into the wall like they always show on the home network TV. Thank you so much for posting this!!! I feel way more confident now.
You bet
He wears the exact same shade of blue collar shirt that I do!! Love it!! No nonsense talk - in order to make a lengthy video - rather, he’s straight to the point with USEFUL TIPS, and not proclaiming to be “captain obvious”. Off to Menards so I can get me a drywall saw and climb a stack of 2x4s!!
It is one of the best videos on any project; easily explained for an inexperienced person like myself to follow. Thanks
This is a really great video. Very informative step by step. I'm a complete novice when it comes to this so now I know all the precautions even though many of it seems to be common sense it's always good to have all bases covered before proceeding. Gonna continue see if there's a video on how to insulate walls. Thanks again!
Lol when we want to take away wall paper it's so hard.... here it looks so easy 🤣
MARILU ORNELAS it turns out that the easiest way to remove wallpaper is to remove the drywall it’s attached to 😬
We used piranha wallpaper remover from lowes. Not very expensive. Worked wonders for us. Bit messy.
The drywall can be used on your lawn. It helps break up up compacted soil and adds nutrients. Just a tip for you.
Good stuff. I like that it was more thought out than how HGTV makes it look by getting a sledge hammer and running through the wall like the Kool Aid man. This will help me demo the terrible drywall in my basement.
Thanks Shannon, your video was very helpful and saved me from the typical mistakes an amateur makes going in blind. Great tips on safety & methodology along with your characteristically friendly attitude to top-off the video. Much appreciated.
In California where I live you have to have the sheetrock inspected after it's hung and before mud and tape (because of earthquake standards). They wouldn't be very happy to see edge nails and glue. 12/4 is mostly the nail pattern here. But the glue sure made taking it down a breeze, and took care of that wall paper removal in the process...
Excellent video. I am going to tear out two kitchen walls this weekend. I assumed by watching the DIY t.v. shows that I was going to just hammer away at the walls to remove the old drywall. But doing it your way is better. Then I can have new plumbing and electrical completed which will make my kitchen renovation much easier.
good luck
I love how neat this was
One way to do this is-
*OH YEAH*
What a terrific video! I'm a complete novice and I feel much more confident attempting this after seeing your video. Thank you!
This was a very informative video I would have never thought of pulling drywall off like that I would have just took a hammer and start hacking holes and pulling it a part. which would have been more Messier then the way you done it
I did exactly like you mentioned now I’m up a 1:30 am cleaning up & watch this video
Always nice (and rare) to hear a fellow Saskatchewan accent on UA-cam
a good foot really helps, or in my brothers case a good headbutt (he actually headbutted a stud once)
This really helps me approach a basement wall removal project. I guess I don't need a recip saw afterall. Thanks Shanon.
Thank you very much for this video. Someone put normal drywall in the bathroom with flat paint. 40 years later, it is paper thin. Plus, moisture from the tub has gotten up in the dryway so I need to replace it. This is very helpful and gives me confidence to do it myself. Unfortunately for me, there is plumbing and a tile counter/sink and toilet in the way lol. Oh and I subscribed.
Don't forget to protect finishes that will remain from drywall dust.... that stuff is viscious. A box of painters plastic and a couple rolls of tape will save you lots of cleanup time.
Shannon we often take a reciprocating saw with a shortened blade so you don't cut electrical wires and then cut the drywall between the studs allowing us to just rip off the strips. I would like to see what you do when it is time to tape at the ceiling.
PS check out the wallboarders buddy drywall cutter. I just finished off a whole house for the first time in 40 years. There were 120 corner beads to set and 8" window returns throughout the house as the house has 14" thick walls. It sure made the job easier
Just found your videos recently. Thank you for the clear explanations and letting us know what to expect. It really takes the worry out of DIY! I will be lookin at your channel first for my home improvement tasks. Thank you!
Love my Picquic!
Great videos as always, good to see you guys back.
Really enjoy your videos Shannon. They help me tackle my own home improvements more confidently! :)
Thanks for doing this video. How do you remove the structure attached to the walls and ceiling?
make sure it isn't a structural wall/bearing wall, then go to down and rip it out...
Thank you for showing me how to remove drywall. I had a leak in bathroom and had to replace floors and walls and tiles. Your video was very helpful and gave me the confidence to handle the job. Thank you again
What video did you look up to redo your floors im having same problem in restroom with leak need to replave both floor and drywall
This dude got lucky with that whole piece coming off.
I really appreciate you sharing your knowledge Shannon. Your videos are awesome. I plan on installing new windows in my home and all your videos have been super helpful. Thanks for sharing your knowledge with us.
More informative than the other videos I've watched. Thanks!
And what about the top left corner of drywal you left hanging there? I was waiting to see how you would tear that part out since you didn't cut it with the knife and it would have perhaps torn the drywal above the doorway.
I really enjoyed watching this video and learning something new
thanks for taking the time to explain and execute the job - very helpful and much appreciated. cheers.
Thanks so much! I'm trying to figure out how to rip out the small entry walls to our small kitchen pantry. I wanted to put cabinets in to replace the pantry. Very interesting. Now I have to make sure they aren't loadbearing...Thanks again.
I am wondering why there were no screws in the drywall field; then I saw you had glue. Good video but it is not the same for me.For me, I will use a magnet to find the screws then mark them and remove them before removing the panel. Nice tip for scoring the joins to the ceiling.
This is just the video I was looking for. Very good step by step instruction, thanks!
Excellent video, Shannon, thanks! I wondered if you'd get around to mentioning the issue of drywall (gypsum) dust. It's particularly fine-grained stuff, not something you want in your lungs. At the end of your video, you mention the idea of wearing a dust mask-but maybe it'd be a good idea to add something about that at the beginning instead. I'm just thinking that some people may not watch all the way to the end, and it's something they really should be careful about if they'll be working with much drywall at all.
You are correct ,unfortunately we can not edit a video once posted without losing all of our stats.
Video old but thanks first time home owner couple things to do👍🏻
This was a great video! I feel really confident that I will be able to demolish a small wall in my house now! Thank you 🙏🏼
I saw the glue spots but it doesn't look like it did a very good job at holding the sheetrock on the wall, otherwise you would have had a hell of a time getting it off not to mention all the scraping you would have to do to clean up the studs before putting up new sheetrock.
I'm So scared 😭to do some renovations on a home that was destroyed maliciously/out of spite. I also am equally afraid to throw money away with general contractors and tradesmen who have made it an industry practice to take advantage of female clients.
So..
.I'm watching these videos and hoping it combines with my previous construction/carpentry experience from a family business (that closed when the relative passed away) and my natural intellect to get the work done and done right 👍😏😇🌞
I appreciate this mans simplicity and safety advice would have fucked up without knowing 75% of this shit ✊much love bud ❤️
I really like and appreciate these videos man. Please keep'em coming.
Sheet rock and dry wall is so cheap.
First thing I did when I bought my house was rip ALL OF IT away.
Reinforced all the studs by making them sections of 3, instead of 1. Put support beams going accross.
And added 3/4s inch ply with sheet metal attached to the outside to it.
Such a house can withstand tornado weather, and flying debries like it's nothing.
Also anchor all floors down to the conccrete base of the house.
Was it expensive? yes. worth it? yes.
Yu have security in your place, and you don't have any fear AT ALL of any huricane, or weather of any kind.
DOing this to a small rancher home btw makes it allot easier. It would take much more time to do it to multi level places.
But it can be done.
thanks! I just successfully finished removing a massive amount of dry wall in a basement after watching this video
+hanwenzero you're welcome.
Very helpful and you have a pleasant way about you. Good tutorial.
I used a multi tool to cut a straighter line, and partially through, then I used the knife to cut. I was having issues cutting with the knife, due to there being osb board behind the drywall.
Hey! What about removing a wall with wood paneling?
Great video Shannon...Thank you for taking the time to make these videos.
Great stuff. Now I can get started on my garage upgrade!
Thanks so much Shannon. Great video for us ladies repairing alone. Y ou are a great explainer. Simple and easy it seems.
You're an amazing guy! Your videos helped me out with a few projects. Thanks a lot, Shannon
i'm doing my own house renovations after mold and fire damage. this helped me greatly to prepare. thank you!!!!
Wonderful!
@@HouseImprovements muchas gracias muy bien explicado parece sencillo pero mencionas puntos muy importantes. Saludos
Sort of unrelated, but how would you possibly replace that drywall and handle that edge with the popcorn ceiling which you appear to be trying to save?
Would you recommend pre-cutting with an oscillating saw where the drywall meets the ceiling? I know you used a knife.
Mark Cafiero it makes it go quicker and can be useful with plaster but is a bit overpowered and you run the risk of hitting any hidden utilities.
Thank you for your demonstration. I learned what I wanted to see.
How do you know where to stop demolition on the ends? On the right side, I imagine you can remove the corner bead and install a new one after you replace the panel you removed (or maybe keep the corner bead and slip the new panel under it?)
The left side is more tricky in my mind. I read you are not suppose to align panel edges with the edge of an opening (door opening, window opening, closet opening/arch), because cracks are likely to develop in the corner. So where do you stop removing drywall on the left around the arch, if you only want to remove the drywall that you showed being removed and not anymore around the top of the arch? Thank you!!
Nicholas Hoffenpiper Please ask your questions in my forum.www.house-improvements.com/forums/
How do you know when the wall is load bearing?
If I were replacing this drywall, how would I match the corner bead and new mud to a textured ceiling where the two would meet?
What about setting the depth on a circular saw to 3/4 of an inch? It seems like that would be more efficient.
Dust, major dust!
HouseImprovements Thanks.
Matt de Oliveira You can use a vacuum panel saw. They are quite expensive, but you can insert a vacuum hose into it and eliminate any dust created from the cut. It will also cut right through those metal beads on the corners and has adjustable depth.
I love the way he says "aggravation" lmao
EXCELLENT, EXCELLENT - Extremely detailed and very easy to follow instructions with perfect demonstration. THANK YOU!
I need to remove 12inches from the floor up only. I am having a basement waterproofing company in and they need access 1ft up. Any tips? Would there be a power tool to use as I have about 24 ft I have to remove
I would use an oscillating saw. Snap a chalkline to follow and away you go!
Hey Shannon what about pulling down walls with lead paint how would one go about it, please give an insight of procedure
Please use my forum for this question.www.house-improvements.com/forums/
I usually poke holes in the drywall with ah hammer, then rip down the pieces. this method seems so much better. Trying it out this week on an electrical Repair.
Good luck.
Thank you for your help. I watched your video and it gave the knowledge and the confidence to handle the job. Thank you again
although guessing it wasn't a load bearing wall that should be one of the first things to figure out before doing anything to it ?
Thank you for the video. Need to tare down a wall, good video to tell how (however, I am going to assume recycling is an option for drywall?)
Hi I have a question, sorry it is not about the wall, but the ceiling in this video. I have the same type of rough ceiling and I want to have a smooth one. Can you please let me know what is that on the ceiling and how shall I tackle it, shall I simply cover it with cement or something, or sand it. Would really appreciate your answer
+Bab Vladimirova Here is my video showing how to remove a stipple (popcorn) ceiling.ua-cam.com/video/09Q4JQ3p8yg/v-deo.html
Thank you, but I dont think it will work. (I will try though). We have it in the bathroom, wouldn't it collapse by now if it easily removed with just water. Also I think it is painted on.
+Bab Vladimirova there's a big difference between ambient moisture from shower use and direct application of water from a sprayer followed by scraping. It will work. Just make sure you use a straight, sharp (i.e. not old and abused) drywall knife.
Thank you! The video and especially the real time aspect was very informative.
My house is from 1923. Except for the kitchen in the bathroom all the other walls are plastered. I want to take the drywall down in my bathroom, what if there is Plaster under the drywall? And since it is the bathroom is there a certain drywall I should get to replace the old?
Finally someone didn't take a beat stick to a prybar for baseboard.
Great video Shannon! Why would the receptacle have a red wire connected to it? White for 14-2 and yellow for 12-2. I thought red was reserved for 12-2 heating wire only.
It's ok as long as you paint the end of the red wire with white paint when it's feeding a 120V outlet.
The red/orange wire you are seeing is an old original wire from 1975 when the home was built
If there is insulation behind drywall (such as fiberglass) do extra precautions have to be taken?
there will likely be a poly air/vapour barrier between the drywall and insulation if its an exterior wall or ceiling so be careful not to damage it or at least fix or replace it afterwards.
i have a bit of a complicated question: i need to take down the drywall from my basement bathroom but i would like to extend the bathroom a bit into the boiler room to create enough space for a stand in shower. will taking some space from the boiler room cause a problem? and will removing the studs and remaking the frame for the bathroom disturb the floor above? and how do i remove the 2x4s of that wall? thanks
trinaija Please use my forum for any questions you have .www.house-improvements.com/forums/
Thanks for this it was very helpful. How did you fix the flooring gap left by the wall once removed?
Plywood added to get the same height and then the entire main floor was covered in new hardwood flooring
@@HouseImprovements thank you sir
Is the same procedure for the ceiling?
Thank you for the great video. How do you know you will not cut wires as you are using the saw?
Debbie Dungy watch at the 5 min make again
I need to have some drywall removed in my finished basement to access the foundation wall for a crack. Initially I thought I would have to pay someone but I think I can handle this. The time to actually do it is my concern.
Hi mate, is this wall load-bearing? Can you tear out the whole wall with the stud? Cheers
A lot of people use the knife I just shut the breaker off and I use a saber saw and cut into sections and peel them off
Hi Shannon how do you remove the drywall screws from the studs? The screw heads will have dry mud in them. Great videos by the way. Subscribed and liked!
It crushes enough when you stick the driver bit into the head.
Is this today's more traditional drywall? I have a part of a wall I want to take off to put up drywall, but it appears to be the old fashioned stuff that feels almost more rough, like stucco or even a concrete mix. Can you take it off the same way? That is is you even know what I am talking about, given I am not quite sure how to describe it! I tried taking off face (fake?) brick thinking it might snap off, but the surface behind is coming off with it leaving huge gaps. Therefore, it seems to make sense just to remove the whole thing and start again. Not a super big area. Smaller than the one you were working on.
You may have lath and plaster? Come to the forum with your question and maybe a picture and I could help from there. www.house-improvements.com/forums/
Are you at all worried about asbestos in the drywall or popcorn ceiling when removing it? I found out my drywall seams and popcorn ceiling in my 1972 house has 1-5% asbestos in the drywall. Any tips or thoughts?
Mike Lang there is some concern in homes built before the late 90s. the risk in my opinion is slim but never the less it is a risk. wearing a respirator could help.
I drilled a hole on the stud in the ceiling to reroute my internet installation and I think I hit a wire when I did. I just wanted to go behind the wall to make it look professional. I tripped a circuit and later got the breaker to go back on but I have no power in 3 rooms. There was a wire in the attic but I stayed away from it. I am thinking that who ever wired my house followed the stud right directly below the ceiling and dropped down when they made it to the outlet or ceiling fixtures
going to have to get that fixed. I would turn off the breaker until then.
HouseImprovements do you think I hit it with the drill? I noticed it rightafterwards. I have the power off right now
yup hit it with drill
I can not see the picture here. Use my forum for more help. www.house-improvements.com/forums/
The stud looks like a 4 x 4 because it was solid. That is the 1 that separates the 2 walls. That is the 1 I drilled a hole in and only thing I did
Don’t forget to comment about lead based paint in some of the older houses
Do you have a video on how to repair a door jam
not trying to downgrade you video but! my dads a 33 year red seal carpenter i'm starting my first year in carpentry through his company, and we had to strip a wall to the studs, and we did it in one piece. and what we did was much faster and easyer(you punch two hand holes between the studs, cut the tape joints on top and sides, grab firmly in the hand holes, shake back and forth drywall will coming in one piece not 5 xD
+ColdFire MC Yup I'm sure it worked fine, You have a younger back than me,LOL. I have learned working by myself that a few extra trips is easier usually than carrying large pieces. Good tip though. Good luck in your career!