Metal Head
6th May 2006, 04:11 PM
Hi Everyone,
I just looked throught the archives and found the thread below to be the closest to what I was seeking. In that yesterday, I sanded down (with a electrical Orbital sander) the part of our back room ceiling that the roofing contractor had put his foots through last October. However, after I finished sanding, the room looked like the winter snow had arrived early:mad:. Fortunetely I had the sense to cover most things prior but it was still a pain having to clean up afterwards.
Thus generally speaking what could be done (if possible) to prevent sanding the ceiling flat and creating dust everywhere?. Do the professionals use a straight edge to level off the plaster they have just applied?, or are there other tricks of the trade. The area I was sanding was approximately 600mm square.
http://www.woodworkforums.ubeaut.com.au/showthread.php?t=3843&highlight=sanding+plaster
Thanking all those who take the time out to answer any of my questions or add some advicethat would help.
Cheers
David
I just looked throught the archives and found the thread below to be the closest to what I was seeking. In that yesterday, I sanded down (with a electrical Orbital sander) the part of our back room ceiling that the roofing contractor had put his foots through last October. However, after I finished sanding, the room looked like the winter snow had arrived early:mad:. Fortunetely I had the sense to cover most things prior but it was still a pain having to clean up afterwards.
Thus generally speaking what could be done (if possible) to prevent sanding the ceiling flat and creating dust everywhere?. Do the professionals use a straight edge to level off the plaster they have just applied?, or are there other tricks of the trade. The area I was sanding was approximately 600mm square.
http://www.woodworkforums.ubeaut.com.au/showthread.php?t=3843&highlight=sanding+plaster
Thanking all those who take the time out to answer any of my questions or add some advicethat would help.
Cheers
David