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Before paining new drywall...

The Money Pit

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Dec 6, 2005
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137
Location
Virginia
Should I clean off as much dust from the sheetrock? If the dust isn't a big deal, I'll start to paint immediately. But if it's better to clean the rock before I paint I will. It's very time consuming and I need to get it done. My building permit expires on 12-31-06. I've only got 3 more inspections left.
 
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Bill K

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Oct 21, 2005
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Thomasville NC
Yes it is best to remove as much dust for a qualityand long lasting paint job. Old white t shirts slightly damp work well, wrap one around the head of a pole sander to wipe down the walls helps speed thing up a bit.
Make sure to prime first!
Bill
 
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T

The Money Pit

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Dec 6, 2005
Messages
137
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Virginia
I'm vacuuming it. I'm about 1/2 done with the downstairs. It's taken me about 1 hour and 45 minutes. I hate doing it. BUT it's got to be done. It's just time consuming and I'm the only one working on it. I've still got the rest of the downstairs then the upstairs & bathroom. Maybe 3 more hours total. Then I've got to clean the up and downstairs floors. THEN I can prime and paint. Ugh. :Twitch:
 

PAToyota

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Jan 20, 2006
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South Central Pennsylvania, USA
Ever since I first used one of these Porter Cable drywall sanders, I'd never do drywall any other way:
porter-cable-drywall-sander-dust-collection.jpg


You aren't left with dust coating everything (including yourself) and everything is nice and smooth.
 

Down Under Bloke

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Sep 17, 2006
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378
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Top End NT Australia
PAToyota is on the money. I have sanded a few walls and ceilings in my time (it *****) the dry wall sander is great. I can't hire one locally so for the bigger jobs I just get a contractor do the lot.

The result achieved with the sander is excellent and no mess
 

MyDomain

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Nov 7, 2006
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199
Location
SouthCentral PA
PAToyota said:
Ever since I first used one of these Porter Cable drywall sanders, I'd never do drywall any other way:

You aren't left with dust coating everything (including yourself) and everything is nice and smooth.

Do you rent it or own it? :hellobye: Just askin' :bow: :lol2:
 
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The Money Pit

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Virginia
If only my finisher had used one. :( The dust on the walls isn't that bad. It's the sheer square footage that has to be vacuumed that's a PITA. I finished the downstairs ceiling and walls. I've got the upstairs left and then I can start cleaning the floors, prime and paint, trim out, hang doors, finish the bathroom, lay the padding & carpet, put up railing, hook up the water & sewer and have the HVAC finished up then I can call for my final inspection. That's all.:wtf:
 
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rworkman98

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Jul 31, 2006
Messages
24
I've never heard of a drywall sander before, but it sounds like a great idea. Is it pretty easy to use correctly?
 

BowtieNut

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Oct 31, 2005
Messages
138
Location
MN
I just opened the garage doors and used my leafblower to get rid of the dust. I'm sure it didn't get every last speck of dust, but I think it got at least 95% of it. Very messy, but it only took about 20 minutes to do the whole 28x48 garage. Kinda looked like smoke pouring outa the garage while I was doing it, but when I painted I didn't notice much of any dust left.
 

PAToyota

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Jan 20, 2006
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South Central Pennsylvania, USA
The drywall sander has a rotating head and connects up to a vacuum - they come together from the rental place. Pretty simple to use and sure beats sanding by hand - although the unit does get pretty heavy after a few hours. I did the downstairs shop (over 1000 s.f. of drywall) in one weekend and then the upstairs shop (less floor s.f., but actually more wall s.f. due to partition walls) the next.
 

Toxicscrew

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Nov 22, 2006
Messages
296
Location
Saint Louis, MO
Painted many houses and commercial buildings and never cleaned the walls beforehand. The dust is usually so fine when you put that first coat on it is gone. Buy good paint and use two coats, primers not really necessary.

This being said I can see the possible benefit of wiping/vacuuming the walls down. The vacuum head was not really created to clean the wallsm but to keep the sanding guys lungs clean.
 
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The Money Pit

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Dec 6, 2005
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137
Location
Virginia
I'm a stickler for some things. I ended up vacuuming the walls off with my shop vac and vacuuming the floors up too. I scraped as much mud off the floor as I could. I'll mop up the rest once I've got everything else done. I'll prime this weekend and get most of the painting done. Hopefully. Slowly but surely. I need to get the progress pictures up and post them.
 
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