|
Welcome to the Australian Ford Forums forum. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and inserts advertising. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members, respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features without post based advertising banners. Registration is simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us. Please Note: All new registrations go through a manual approval queue to keep spammers out. This is checked twice each day so there will be a delay before your registration is activated. |
|
The Bar For non Automotive Related Chat |
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
30-10-2022, 09:26 AM | #1 | ||
DIY Tragic
Join Date: Apr 2018
Location: Sydney, more than not. I hate it.
Posts: 22,606
|
Has anyone experience with the following?
Just to be clear, not talking about acrylic renders but polymer modified cement renders. Looking at using a bag mix, as the meterage of this job isn’t sufficient to buy raw materials and mix from scratch, and bags of traditional render are no longer common around here. I can’t find any resource that addresses jointing with traditional render. Should I use a cut joint, or can I feather it over a broken edge of older render? It needs to last. There’s no new substrate, all old work, so nothing to unexpectedly shift there. I’m just a bit gun-shy, as my experiences in the past with modified coatings have been disappointing, although they were furniture finishes. |
||
30-10-2022, 10:36 AM | #2 | ||
praek tih kl jo kr
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: Atwell W.A.
Posts: 1,692
|
I rendered some retaining walls at my mums place before we sold it, I just purchased some cheap premix cream cement from Bunnings and did the whole back yard and a BBQ area, it worked great and was still there holding fine a year later when I sold it,, don't know if it was the right way to do it but the you tube vids I watched were all done with just standard bagged cement.
I did pressure wash all the walls before I rendered to remove any loose stuff, but that was the only prep I did. |
||
2 users like this post: |
30-10-2022, 08:41 PM | #3 | ||
DIY Tragic
Join Date: Apr 2018
Location: Sydney, more than not. I hate it.
Posts: 22,606
|
Was it something like this?
https://www.bunnings.com.au/davco-20...ender_p0034888 Obviously that time of year, Bunnings have sold a lot of this since Friday afternoon - many stores are now saying no stock. I decided in the end to cut my existing surfaces, it may be a decision I come to regret but worried more that if I feathered it, the edge might shrink back or pick up and look worse than a cut line. |
||
30-10-2022, 09:59 PM | #4 | ||
praek tih kl jo kr
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: Atwell W.A.
Posts: 1,692
|
Nope it was this
https://www.bunnings.com.au/westbuil...gion_id=112160 I think that render is for the inside, I could be wrong, but I thought all the grey stuff was for inside then they plaster over it? |
||
This user likes this post: |
30-10-2022, 10:32 PM | #5 | ||
DIY Tragic
Join Date: Apr 2018
Location: Sydney, more than not. I hate it.
Posts: 22,606
|
WA does things a bit differently, I’d forgotten - still lots of proper white set interiors.
The bag mix I linked, would be primarily used inside but you could use it outside under paint or an acrylic membrane. Never enjoyed the wet trades, don’t have cement in my blood. |
||