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Mudding and taping next to outlet
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| Eigenvector 2007-01-30, 9:25 pm |
| When mudding and taping and finishing a seam - what should you do when an
outlet opening runs right next to it? Seems like it ruins the pull when you
have to swerve the knife out of the way to miss getting mud all over the
outlet or picking up drywall grit into your mud when the knife passes over
the hole.
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| Eigenvector wrote:
> When mudding and taping and finishing a seam - what should you do
> when an outlet opening runs right next to it? Seems like it ruins
> the pull when you have to swerve the knife out of the way to miss
> getting mud all over the outlet or picking up drywall grit into your
> mud when the knife passes over the hole.
Start at the outlet and go either way away from it not to it.
Rich
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| Eigenvector 2007-01-30, 9:25 pm |
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"Rich" <madeyoulook@dot.com> wrote in message
news:45c0047f$0$21819$9a6e19ea@unlimited.newshosting.com...
> Eigenvector wrote:
>
> Start at the outlet and go either way away from it not to it.
>
> Rich
How do you approach the seam that is right next to it? Just use a small
knife and forget the tape?
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| Harry K 2007-01-31, 3:25 am |
| On Jan 30, 6:56 pm, "Eigenvector" <m44_mas...@yahoo.com> wrote:
> "Rich" <madeyoul...@dot.com> wrote in message
>
> news:45c0047f$0$21819$9a6e19ea@unlimited.newshosting.com...> Eigenvector wrote:
>
>
>
> How do you approach the seam that is right next to it? Just use a small
> knife and forget the tape?
I do the same as Rich says. I put a strip of masking tape over the
plug or switch or pull them. You could pull the plug or switch, lay
tape over the box and mud/tape as if it weren't there. Pull the tape
off after each application. Never tried that but it should work.
Harry K
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