Hi Shannon, Thank you for the thorough explanation for all you did. Knowing the reasons for each step will prevent me from giving in to the desire to take shortcuts! One of your responses stated that caulk is not good in wet areas. Can you explain? Thanks!
I just ripped out the tile in my shower and I noticed there are 2 sheets of 3/8" drywall in the rest of the bathroom (3/4 thick). My question is : should I go with 2 sheets of 3/8 durock to make it flush or 1sheet 3/8 drywall and 1 sheet 3/8 durock?
Great demonstration. I just have one question. Some tile guys told me to use caulk rather than grout for the tile edges because the tile and the drywall (greenboard) shrink and expand differently therefore it is better for the joint to have something flexible (hence the caulk rather than grout). What do you think?
@chinsae3e342 This can be true, the edge grout may crack over time. The "Quartzlock" grout I was using in the video is very good at resisting any cracking. If you are not going to grout the edge, I would use a paintable silicone not a caulk because caulk is generally not great around wet areas. Make sure that it is paintable silicone and not regular silicone as regular silicone can not be painted in the event you need to touch-up the paint or change colors in the future. Thanks for the question!
@chinsae3e342 I would use a double layer of 3/8 Durock for the first 12" above the tub edge or shower pan edge, and then above that use a layer of drywall covered by a layer of Durock. Why? Because usually a failure in the silicone seal above the tub / shower edge is 90% of the time where you will get a leak which can result in mold developing on any drywall in that area. So a double layer in your case will help prevent any drywall from being contacted by moisture at that common trouble area.
I am remodeling my bathroom and have watched every drywalling video on youtube! Shannon's videos are by far the best and most helpful. Thanks alot. I couldn't have done it without you!
@lyricrs205 See the comment just below yours. I'd rather do a useful video that's a few minutes too long than one that wastes your time because it doesn't get the important points across.
Very helpful, especially along the edge where a lot of the other help videos fall short. I now have the know how to finish my kitchen tiles in Britain. :-)
Thanks for the video dude. I pretty much thought this was the way to do it, but I didn't know about the rubber trough... I don't know what I was thinking I was going to use, but yea, rubber trough looks like what I need.
This was incredibly clear and helpful, thank you!
AlleyToBetween 2 months ago
EXCELLENT AND USEFUL DEMO - THANX
srot77 2 months ago
Thanks for the demonstration. I'm going to do some re-grouting tomorrow (first time) so I've learned a lot from this. Thanks.
tony999Melb 3 months ago
Moose Jaw represent!!
jaydubber17 4 months ago
Great tutorial. Thanks!
redfivenz 4 months ago
Very helpful. Thanks!
JohnPullum 4 months ago
Thanks House Improvements, now feel like a pro after watching this video :)
xpringle87 5 months ago
Hi Shannon, Thank you for the thorough explanation for all you did. Knowing the reasons for each step will prevent me from giving in to the desire to take shortcuts! One of your responses stated that caulk is not good in wet areas. Can you explain? Thanks!
starzspeak 6 months ago
Comment removed
starzspeak 6 months ago
I just ripped out the tile in my shower and I noticed there are 2 sheets of 3/8" drywall in the rest of the bathroom (3/4 thick). My question is : should I go with 2 sheets of 3/8 durock to make it flush or 1sheet 3/8 drywall and 1 sheet 3/8 durock?
stantonfriedman 7 months ago
Thank you!
deaconmath 7 months ago
This is a great video! I like your pace and the patient approach of conveying the information!
JohnnyD421 7 months ago
Thanks Buddy. Great video.
Frandoz7 7 months ago
Thank you for a great and helpfull video
chesterfield44 8 months ago
Great demonstration. I just have one question. Some tile guys told me to use caulk rather than grout for the tile edges because the tile and the drywall (greenboard) shrink and expand differently therefore it is better for the joint to have something flexible (hence the caulk rather than grout). What do you think?
chinsae3e342 9 months ago
@chinsae3e342 This can be true, the edge grout may crack over time. The "Quartzlock" grout I was using in the video is very good at resisting any cracking. If you are not going to grout the edge, I would use a paintable silicone not a caulk because caulk is generally not great around wet areas. Make sure that it is paintable silicone and not regular silicone as regular silicone can not be painted in the event you need to touch-up the paint or change colors in the future. Thanks for the question!
HouseImprovements 9 months ago
@chinsae3e342 I would use a double layer of 3/8 Durock for the first 12" above the tub edge or shower pan edge, and then above that use a layer of drywall covered by a layer of Durock. Why? Because usually a failure in the silicone seal above the tub / shower edge is 90% of the time where you will get a leak which can result in mold developing on any drywall in that area. So a double layer in your case will help prevent any drywall from being contacted by moisture at that common trouble area.
HouseImprovements 7 months ago
Excellent advice, very helpful thanks
israfele 9 months ago
Thanks for taking the time to make the video. Some useful tips!
highlander500 9 months ago
I am remodeling my bathroom and have watched every drywalling video on youtube! Shannon's videos are by far the best and most helpful. Thanks alot. I couldn't have done it without you!
mpdbill 9 months ago
great job,i am hoping to start a tile apprenticship any hints or tips to getting my foot in the door? thanks
TheJrsagar 10 months ago
video could have all the info in about 5mins.....Zzzzzz
lyricrs205 10 months ago
@lyricrs205 See the comment just below yours. I'd rather do a useful video that's a few minutes too long than one that wastes your time because it doesn't get the important points across.
HouseImprovements 10 months ago 8
Thanks for making this video more than 1 minute long. Its much more helpful than the other videos on youtube.
eynonpower 11 months ago 4
thanks :)
morecandy818 11 months ago
Very helpful, especially along the edge where a lot of the other help videos fall short. I now have the know how to finish my kitchen tiles in Britain. :-)
Parsley1968 11 months ago
Very useful... Thanks for taking the time to put this out there...
phoenixcardsangle 11 months ago
GOOD TEACHING!
thuonglesa 1 year ago
great stuff man, thanks for posting.
mattlesnake 1 year ago
Very very helpful, I appreciate it!
RobbCorp 1 year ago
Very helpful, straight to the point without being dramatic and preachy. I appreciate that, thanks!
KodiakAlpha 1 year ago
Thank-you for the helpful video.
joebiescha 1 year ago
Thanks for the video dude. I pretty much thought this was the way to do it, but I didn't know about the rubber trough... I don't know what I was thinking I was going to use, but yea, rubber trough looks like what I need.
Thanks again. Very informative and clear
LordThree 1 year ago
Very helpful. Thanks for this!
maiorano84 1 year ago
@maiorano84 You're welcome, thanks for the feedback. Be sure to check out our other videos and the web site for more home improvement articles.
HouseImprovements 1 year ago