I've got day 79 and on I'll remind you guys.
Yeah, but I've got day 39.5 and beyond to day 78...just thought I'd remind ya!Whitetail said:
I've got day 79 and on I'll remind you guys.
Grouting is not technically hard; it is however very physically intensive and exhausting to grout a large area.Oogway said:
Grouting isn't too hard is it?
Its not the grouting, its cleaning the grout haze off the tiles that sucks. That, and having to redo it half way through grouting 270 sf it when your wife says "Thats not the grout color we picked. You need to fix it. And I dont want it painted.". And you have to hand chisel out every damn bit of whats already in. That really sucks.dubi said:Grouting is now technically hard; it is however very physically intensive and exhausting to grout a large area.Oogway said:
Grouting isn't too hard is it?
I swore after that I would never lay another tile again in my life. I dont really care what it costs, I'm paying some other sorry SOB to do it. Without any regrets.RK said:
may have been easier to replace the wife rather than the grout.
WOW!Quote:
That, and having to redo it half way through grouting 270 sf it when your wife says "Thats not the grout color we picked. You need to fix it. And I dont want it painted.". And you have to hand chisel out every damn bit of whats already in. That really sucks.
Something similar happened to us and we just stained the grout and moved on with life. Can't even tell it wasn't that color to begin with!mathguy86 said:Its not the grouting, its cleaning the grout haze off the tiles that sucks. That, and having to redo it half way through grouting 270 sf it when your wife says "Thats not the grout color we picked. You need to fix it. And I dont want it painted.". And you have to hand chisel out every damn bit of whats already in. That really sucks.dubi said:Grouting is now technically hard; it is however very physically intensive and exhausting to grout a large area.Oogway said:
Grouting isn't too hard is it?
AggieFactor said:
All the paneling in the bathroom is made from Medex MDF for the rails and stiles with the large panels made from hardboard. The hardboard is raised but an inch from the bottom of all the panelind and that is also why I am caulking all the joints so that no water can get to the hardboard edges. The smooth face is pretty much waterproof because of how they finish it but the edges will swell like an SOB if they get wet.
http://centralhardwoods.com/products/sheet_goods/medex
Will you at least consider priming it with Kilz so you have an additional waterproof barrier?AggieFactor said:
Dubi, thats why we went with the Medex MDF because it does not swell when wet. The tub is going to be surrounded anyways with a 6" marble "splash guard" so the possibility of enough water getting up to the Medex anyways to create an issue is very minimal. Between the product itself, the caulking, the priming, and the painting I confident there will not be an issue.
Dumb question alertAggieFactor said:
Since this whole room is new drywall and bare wood, I am Kilz everything first before texture and paint go on so yes it was already considered.