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Step by step guide to show you how to plasterboard/dry-line a brick or block wall for the home DIY enthusiast. I'll tell you exactly what techniques to use t...
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It’s pretty obvious that you would like to fix cabinets to your walls, but you simply cannot fix it straight to the plasterboard. At the end of the day it’s not a solid wall of bricks.
Hanging a cabinet in bathroom is probably even easier that in the kitchen, because very often you will have solid brick walls. If that’s the case you just have to drill two holes, insert the plugs and fix the cabinet.
A little bit different story is when you have to put up a bathroom cabinet or anything else on tiles. This is very common when people mistakenly use regular plugs and screws to plain plasterboard walls.
Having all the (hopefully) valuable information I have brought you in this article I believe a task to hang a bathroom cabinet over the toilet should be fairly easy.
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Patented in America in 1894, the use of plasterboard as an internal dry lining finish is a relatively recent application. It has become popular as an alternative to plaster finishes because it is cleaner and less labour intensive than wet plastering and reduces the drying out time of building construction.
Gypsum boards or plasterboards are typical materials used to build light walls. The production process is based on gypsum hydration technology. At the very beginning of the process dehydrated calcium sulfate (gypsum) is converted into CaSO4 ·0.5H 2 O by heating. Once dehydrated, gypsum is mixed with water, starch, a foaming agent, and other additives. The gypsum foam thus obtained is then spread onto cardboard running on a conveyor belt (see Figure 33 ). CaSO 4 ·0.5H 2 O starts the hydration and the crystallization process immediately after coming into contact with water to form CaSO 4 ·2H 2 O. The new crystals have a needle-like structure and interlock with each other creating a solid, firm structure. The crystallization of CaSO 4 ·2H 2 O generates heat that helps the starch to gelatinize and migrate toward the cardboard.
The most common internal wall surface in NZ commercial building construction is plasterboard, acting either as part of a fire-rated wall to the building core, or acting merely as a partition cladding to enclose office space. It is a versatile material that can be skimmed over lightly with plaster, and sanded and painted to become a smooth surface for a wall. As such, it is virtually ubiquitous throughout a building site, but it is also frequently compromised by breakage.
A recirculation system requires a well sealed roofspace for optimum performance. Builders details were developed to attempt a reasonable standard of air tightness, eg plastic film interleaved at wall/roof junctions, rubber seals to roof sheeting, draught seals to ventilation dampers.
If you have the time and money to invest in a higher quality finish, wet plaster is almost certainly the preferable option. It brings a more durable, smoother finish with no joins between boards or screw holes to manually fill with drywall compound.
Generally the preferred option for masonry professionals in the UK, a traditional plaster finish can give your walls and ceilings a uniquely smooth result that plasterboard just can’t compete with. Not only does wet plaster give an exceptional finish, but it’s also known to be incredibly durable and resistant to degradation over time.
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