JRC3
Well-known member
If you don't have one of these...Then get one. I use them for compound and thinset.
Menards has one for $6.
Menards has one for $6.
Start using them for stuff. The mud will break up and fall out before long. Once that happens you can use them for "clean" stuff.
Never throw out a good bucket. The best is if you can find ones used for food service. If you know the right guy you can usually get stacks of 5 gal buckets.
I find this thread amusing as I have the opposite problem. I buy kitty litter in nice plastic buckets with lids that are already clean when empty. It seems a shame to throw them away but I have far more than I'll ever use stashed overhead in the garage so what else can I do with them?
With that being the case I of course would never spend the time to clean a drywall or paint bucket, they go straight to the trash.
Water is cheap and plentiful in the mid Atlantic, this is a non-issue in MA, or anywhere in the US as water is cheap. If it were scarce, the price would reflect it.
I clean buckets with water and an old drywall knife then get the last of it with a sponge, rag, scotch brite, or whatever similar item is handy. Quick and easy. Just let the mud soak up some water and it washes off.
40 gallons of water wasted
Set them outside in the rain if you are worried about the water usage. 40 gallons is not alot of water
I hope you're not putting paint down the drain to the septic.I'd rather waste a little water (and at least for us it goes back into the ground water from septic)--and put the clean buckets at the curb for recycling. Paint buckets, drywall buckets and kitty litter--use them multiple times and/or recycle the surplus. Plastic in the land fills is pretty much forever.
Takes a few minutes--with paint I typically have one five full of water to do first rinse on rollers and brushes anyways, so it is trivial to continue the cleaning


