Well done. Might I suggest a quick few words to start your video. Almost lost me after a minute as it didn't look like you were going to explain your technique or zoom in enough to get the details. You just saved me a bunch of install pain. Thanks!
RIGHT ! You must be using Fauci's " triple mask technique " then right ? It sounds to me like you should save the mask for your tears after finding out that the CRAP that you received with your " jab " has multiple problems associated with it and now THAT is in YOUR body.
Just had a restore/reno done in my house. Every single trade for some reason cant fathom putting down something on the floor to protect it, even the painters were half-arsed about it and would lay a caulking gun on the bare, cherry wood end table. I appreciate this video, but that razor knife right over the finished floor was killing me. The reason I'm watching this and doing my own base is I just wanted the flooring guy out of my house with his butchery on the trim work and complete lack of floor protection once he had the floor laid. I would lay out old rugs for places to put their tools and they would find the one spot the good rug was still exposed and sit their tool bucket on it. I have done plenty of work in people's houses, I always bring blankets to lay down where my tools and work will be...AND I make sure the blankets are not filthy. I even take my shop blankets to the laundromat once in a while My wife is a better painter than the "pro" we had and we finished his work, I could not mud as well as the drywall guy but still had to follow behind him to touch stuff up with my own joint compound and sanding, the plumber was essentially a jackleg, I had to and am still following behind him, and the flooring guy couldn't trim his way out of a wet paper bag...so I'm finishing his work too. So, thanks for publishing the video, but please get something between that knife and the finished floor!
I do lots of different carpentry work. I always cover the floor. Last week I forgot to bring something to cover the floor, I used my floor mats out of my vehicle (it was a small job). I know how important it is to most customers so it's important to me. Also I don't want to have to replace it. Good comment! Sounds like you picked all the wrong guys.
To be half way fair to this guy, when we was cutting against the floor he was using an off cut of the rubber wall base underneath to protect it, and he had that wet rag there to quickly clean up any adhesive that got on the floor before it dried. Still would be nice to see a painters blanket or moving blanket underneath the work area
@@alexanderblanchette9477 so I have been installing flooring for nearly 50 years and we do not put blankets under our working area ever. Cumbersome, difficult to work on, not really necessary if you are as skilled as this man and somewhat of a safety issue. Personally, I would not use his method, but if it works for him it works
A tub yes if needed for gaps at new floor. shower pans tend to be lower so this might be too talll or cut it down. Corner round moulding would be good for both. There is nonwood white colored trim that wont rot. I would seal or glue the pan edge or tub edge to the new floor good so theres no water pathway past first as well . My tenants had to be told to use the shower curtain ,they made a mess below
@@gordogo Thank you! Yippee - the edge of the shower pan & tub are taller than the vinyl baseboard, so both will have it glued to their sides. Its useless having pretty baseboards in bathroom w/kids of any age, they always manage to splash water on the floor & walls. In my next life, this mother will raise her kids in a sturdy barn or metal building ...
There are several types of base adhesives. Depending on what your adhering to, and the product you are using. Normally the people selling the product can help ya!
This how you don’t install base, you scribe inside corners, because no corner is square, leaving a gap in most cases. You never bead base adhesive, you spread it evenly.
I didn't make this video but I am a pro floor installer.I can't think of any self sticking product I recommend.Solid techique in the video ,by the way.
What happens if you peel that type of glue off if you want to replace baseboard later? Do your walls get destroyed, or is there some kind of adhesive like a rubber type or something that can be removed without too much wall damage? If damage did occur, I imagine the entire bottom of the wall would have to have new plasterboard, right?
I just took off the baseboard in my bathroom and I used an electric heating gun. Go to thisoldhouse.com and it will tell you everything you need to know.
Care should be taken when removing.It shouldn't do any damage.I use a carpet stair tool and scrape the cove base off from top to bottom.Some types of drywall will have loose paper left behind after removal.If that occurs you should score the paper with a razor knife and remove it from the top of the base down.If you don't the paper will soften from the glue and your new base will fall off.
As I watch these videos no one tells you to offset your inside an outside corners an it really bothers me, if you Re going to make a video, do it right, but one of the better videos
this is the poster child for amateur vids... not sayin its a bad thing.... but the 2 most enormous traits are the bald spot center stage and throughout,,, and well the other is obvious......
Typically Roberts 7200 30C Cove Base Adhesive is a good one for initial grab and longevity. Don’t know which he uses, and get yourself a cove base glue tip.
I've been watching a few of these videos here and this guy is the only one I would hire at top dollar. Thx for the sharing 👍
How about these days? Would you still hire him with those sniffles during covid19 pandemic??? Haha
Great tip ! Thanks, this is what I was looking for so that I can attach the cove base correctly !!!
It's not that I don't know how to install vinyl floor base molding but it's nice to see other peoples techniques. Thanks for the share.
Get this man a tissue
Well done. Might I suggest a quick few words to start your video. Almost lost me after a minute as it didn't look like you were going to explain your technique or zoom in enough to get the details. You just saved me a bunch of install pain. Thanks!
THANKS FOR THE INSIDE , OUTSIDE TRICKS
Just what we needed. Thanks for posting!
Great video. Love the small square jig made of plinth.
Who's watching this guy sniffle during coronavirus 2020?
He's putting up coke base
RIGHT ! You must be using Fauci's " triple mask technique " then right ? It sounds to me like you should save the mask for your tears after finding out that the CRAP that you received with your " jab " has multiple problems associated with it and now THAT is in YOUR body.
Dude got the dope sniffles
Thanks alot I greatly appreciate the content.
Great video.. hey bud what you snorting there...
Super helpful- thanks
Thanks for this. It's a big help.
Just had a restore/reno done in my house. Every single trade for some reason cant fathom putting down something on the floor to protect it, even the painters were half-arsed about it and would lay a caulking gun on the bare, cherry wood end table. I appreciate this video, but that razor knife right over the finished floor was killing me. The reason I'm watching this and doing my own base is I just wanted the flooring guy out of my house with his butchery on the trim work and complete lack of floor protection once he had the floor laid. I would lay out old rugs for places to put their tools and they would find the one spot the good rug was still exposed and sit their tool bucket on it. I have done plenty of work in people's houses, I always bring blankets to lay down where my tools and work will be...AND I make sure the blankets are not filthy. I even take my shop blankets to the laundromat once in a while
My wife is a better painter than the "pro" we had and we finished his work, I could not mud as well as the drywall guy but still had to follow behind him to touch stuff up with my own joint compound and sanding, the plumber was essentially a jackleg, I had to and am still following behind him, and the flooring guy couldn't trim his way out of a wet paper bag...so I'm finishing his work too.
So, thanks for publishing the video, but please get something between that knife and the finished floor!
I do lots of different carpentry work. I always cover the floor. Last week I forgot to bring something to cover the floor, I used my floor mats out of my vehicle (it was a small job). I know how important it is to most customers so it's important to me. Also I don't want to have to replace it.
Good comment!
Sounds like you picked all the wrong guys.
To be half way fair to this guy, when we was cutting against the floor he was using an off cut of the rubber wall base underneath to protect it, and he had that wet rag there to quickly clean up any adhesive that got on the floor before it dried. Still would be nice to see a painters blanket or moving blanket underneath the work area
@@alexanderblanchette9477 so I have been installing flooring for nearly 50 years and we do not put blankets under our working area ever. Cumbersome, difficult to work on, not really necessary if you are as skilled as this man and somewhat of a safety issue. Personally, I would not use his method, but if it works for him it works
If used in a bathroom, is the vinyl baseboard also glued to the bathtub or shower pan?
A tub yes if needed for gaps at new floor. shower pans tend to be lower so this might be too talll or cut it down. Corner round moulding would be good for both. There is nonwood white colored trim that wont rot. I would seal or glue the pan edge or tub edge to the new floor good so theres no water pathway past first as well . My tenants had to be told to use the shower curtain ,they made a mess below
@@gordogo Thank you! Yippee - the edge of the shower pan & tub are taller than the vinyl baseboard, so both will have it glued to their sides. Its useless having pretty baseboards in bathroom w/kids of any age, they always manage to splash water on the floor & walls. In my next life, this mother will raise her kids in a sturdy barn or metal building ...
Is this good for pet urine I have luxory vinyl floor dog keep peeing under?
He’s trying not to let a $50 bugguh fall out
Thinking the same wanted to mute!!! 🤣
Get a cove base dolly and a wall wiper.
What kind of adhesive are you using?
Nikolay Voytovich it is ultrabond Eco 575 and it’s made by Mapei
Do not use liquid nail
It will say wall base adhesive
There are several types of base adhesives. Depending on what your adhering to, and the product you are using. Normally the people selling the product can help ya!
This looks like standard paint over drywall, with 4ft vinyl base. But there are several options for adhesives, just be mindful of manufacturers specs
Can he blow his nose?
Thanks much for sharing!
This how you don’t install base, you scribe inside corners, because no corner is square, leaving a gap in most cases.
You never bead base adhesive, you spread it evenly.
U should show how to cut the bottom of the outside corner.
Đọc Tin Cho Bạn you don’t cut the bottom of the outside corner
Would you recommend to order cove molding pre-glued
Those that you take the paper off and there’s adhesive already??
I didn't make this video but I am a pro floor installer.I can't think of any self sticking product I recommend.Solid techique in the video ,by the way.
Great video, but he needs to speak louder.
What happens if you peel that type of glue off if you want to replace baseboard later? Do your walls get destroyed, or is there some kind of adhesive like a rubber type or something that can be removed without too much wall damage? If damage did occur, I imagine the entire bottom of the wall would have to have new plasterboard, right?
I just took off the baseboard in my bathroom and I used an electric heating gun. Go to thisoldhouse.com and it will tell you everything you need to know.
Care should be taken when removing.It shouldn't do any damage.I use a carpet stair tool and scrape the cove base off from top to bottom.Some types of drywall will have loose paper left behind after removal.If that occurs you should score the paper with a razor knife and remove it from the top of the base down.If you don't the paper will soften from the glue and your new base will fall off.
YES!
Bookmarked!!!
Napkins please. . Good tutorial anyway 👍
Where to buy vinyl base molding as I cannot find it in my country.
order it off of amazon
CAMERA WORK IS NOT SHOWING CLOSE UP OF CUTTING =====BUT I THINK YOU ALREADY KNOW THAT
blow your noise . that was annoing
As I watch these videos no one tells you to offset your inside an outside corners an it really bothers me, if you Re going to make a video, do it right, but one of the better videos
Tissue, nasal flush bottle, blow, Flonase.
not very helful. No close-ups of what he was doing, nor of finished installed piece, and could barely hear him.
Why would you lay a piece of vinyl on a new floor and cut.... use a scrap piece of wood..
this is the poster child for amateur vids... not sayin its a bad thing.... but the 2 most enormous traits are the bald spot center stage and throughout,,, and well the other is obvious......
Stop with the nose candy
What kind of adhesive are you using ?
Typically Roberts 7200 30C Cove Base Adhesive is a good one for initial grab and longevity. Don’t know which he uses, and get yourself a cove base glue tip.