LX-Markham
Well-known member
Ain’t that the truth! Mine just came back and I don’t have a good place to put it.If someone else is using it you do not have to store it.![]()
Ain’t that the truth! Mine just came back and I don’t have a good place to put it.If someone else is using it you do not have to store it.![]()
Could you explain the " self made **** boards,"?
I'v one room that is 15' wide and IF I can get 16' drywall sheets it will be easy, no butts, few cuts. If I can't then I'm going to a lot of **** joints.
I know Menards sells it but they ar 250+ miles away.
Thanks!![]()
Made them out of whatever 1/2” or less ply scrap I had laying around and used one layer or drywall shims instead of the poster board even they are a bit thicker which I just stapled on.
I got royally hosed, I bought a more expensive made in USA version and it worked great until I got away from the business of hanging drywall. Hard to sell and compete with the less expensive ones that do the same thing, got a fraction of my American made money back when I finally sold it at a huge loss. Stupid business move on my point, should have went HF and increased my profit margins.
Which internet supplier?I picked one up from an internet supplier for my 13’6” ceiling.
It has an extra pole that lifts to 15’.
Worked so well that I was able to fire my wife from the job.
She was grateful for that.
Link didn't work for me.I bought this one recently to do my 14’ ceilings in my pole barn. Did the job great for 12’ steel panels. $150 shipped:
http://r.ebay.com/qbt7Fr
Where on ebay?I used one cheapo of ebay while a bit scary at first it is a real time and back saver, loading was a bit tricky alone because I used a lot of 12' sheets and because I had to get the one for the higher ceilings it made loading even trickier because it was higher.
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At this writing it's $130 https://www.northerntool.com/shop/tools/product_200693184_200693184I thought about just renting one, but this is gonna be a few sheets today, a few sheets next week....kinda thing. Renting could get pricey. Northern tool had it for 150, plus 40 for the extension, if anyone's interested.
Yup sanding drywall can be a mess. I run a hose from my ROS (which I tape to a pole when I need the extra reach) to a little 2 gallon wet/dry vac input. I put a snorkel (cram a hose in) inside the vac down to about the bottom of the vac. Then with several inches of water in the vac it bubbles through the water and NO DUST.Bought one of these about two years ago. (See Below) For me HF and Menards are right accross the street from each other. I compared both within minutes and found them to be identical. The Mud Boss is now yellow but they used to be red just like HF.
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Also bought one of these before that. I've used it dozens of times and the thing is awesome. Best I can tell it's a Festool knockoff. Aleko is the brand found on ebay. I don't think they sell this one (probably got sued) but they do have quite a few other models.
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Made them out of whatever 1/2” or less ply scrap I had laying around and used one layer or drywall shims instead of the poster board even they are a bit thicker which I just stapled on.

Where on ebay?
Interesting, never heard off **** boards before this. Thanks![]()
FYI, some inspectors will ask you to refrain using **** boards as this reduces the quantity of screws in studs for wall boards and strapping/joists for boards at the ceiling. You're splitting the board joints in a stud cavity. Some inspectors are sticklers for screw quantities..
How would this reduce screw quantities if there are fixed number of studs and wall board is still being attached at each one? Unless you're talking about the number of a screws landing on studs at **** joint?
with a 16" O.C. stud wall, in order to use **** joint boards, you have to shift the sheets 8" so the joints land in a "stud cavity", reducing the number of studs bearing load on a single board from 6 to 5.
I brought up the idea of a **** joint board to my inspector and that was his concern. Probably has too much time on his hand but you get the idea.
Most rooms are just under 12' for a reason...1-1/2 sheets of drywall per row. Cut 8" off an 8' sheet and it takes more than half a sheet to make of the difference, not leaving another 4' piece for the next row. Even with 12' sheets on larger rooms you'd be wasting drywall by needing to cut them 8" short. Nothing wrong with wasting drywall if it makes a seem fall in the right place like over a door or window making the finished wall better, but this is not better.
They actually make and sell buttboards. Brilliant, not only do they sell the **** board but they sell more drywall and screws for you to use them.
Not to mention someone pushing against a finished **** board joint and popping the screws through and/or making it crack. It may seem like a cool idea, but it doesn't seem like the best practice for any reason.

with a 16" O.C. stud wall, in order to use **** joint boards, you have to shift the sheets 8" so the joints land in a "stud cavity", reducing the number of studs bearing load on a single board from 6 to 5.
I brought up the idea of a **** joint board to my inspector and that was his concern. Probably has too much time on his hand but you get the idea.
