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Thread: Skirting Board Joins
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1st December 2005, 12:08 PM #1Senior Member
- Join Date
- May 2005
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- Melbourne
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- 149
Skirting Board Joins
We are just about to get all our skirting replaced. It's the 240mm Victorian MDF type.
Just trying to work out quantities. Apparently I can only get them in 5.4m lengths. I really have 2 ways to go.
1. Just get 5.4m lengths for each wall - most of the rooms are about 4m x 4m. There are a few shorter pieces, but would work OK with no joins along the walls. I'd have a fair bit of waste though.
2. Calculate the total lineal metres that I need and add a little bit on for waste. This way, it is possible in some of the rooms that I will have joins between two pieces of skirt.
Option 2 will work out about $150 to $200 more cheaper, but I am just not sure how the joins would look. Any advice appreciated. What do they do in the trade?
Also, they are being attached to plaster/brick walls. Is the best way to glue and nail them? And if I do use a glue, is liquid nails OK or should I go for the higher end glue such as sikaflex??
Cheers
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1st December 2005, 12:37 PM #2
If it does not cost you much to get more skirting board ie. the supplier is not too far away, I would try the second option but only buy enough for the third wall. If your mitre joints are good enough then complete it that way, otherwise its the first option. After saying that I just joined some skirting boards in a studio I have just built for SWMBO and she passed the quality. I joined them using a mitre joint and a tiny bit of filler, when sanded and painted you cannot even see the joint.
I say, give it a go.Rob
Remember to KISS - Keep It Simple Stupid :)
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1st December 2005, 01:05 PM #3
If they are being painted, you could get away with joins but if not, then use continuous lengths and forget the waste. Your house is a big investment so don't cut corners.
If at first you don't succeed, give something else a go. Life is far too short to waste time trying.
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1st December 2005, 06:48 PM #4
If you can manage a decent mitre then join the lengths by all means, place your joins over a stud so you can get a good fixing and try to put your joins where they will be unobtrusive, e.g. behind beds.....
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1st December 2005, 07:35 PM #5
dont be so tight ,that down the road when the joins you make seperate and look unsightly you say to yourself or even worse your other half starts to BRING IT TO YOUR ATTENTION about it being poorly made . then maybe you should have thought (well it will only cost a few more dollars to do it right the first time)
contemplation should be about now
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1st December 2005, 07:38 PM #6Intermediate Member
- Join Date
- Apr 2005
- Location
- Goldfields
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- 33
I would say it depends on your taste and if you plan on staying in the house for a while.
If it was my place and I was staying there I wouldn't want any joins and if the cost is only 200.00 then thats the way to go. Joins can become unsightly and you also have to factor in the extra time it takes to complete the joins.
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1st December 2005, 07:54 PM #7
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1st December 2005, 09:02 PM #8
Agree with echnidna, i would not be using MDF. Get youself some pine if you can't afford hardwood. Get yourself down to a recycling place and pick up some used skirting and rework it if you have to.
If you can do it - Do it! If you can't do it - Try it!
Do both well!
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2nd December 2005, 01:22 AM #9
I was lucky...only one wall was longer that the 5.4 and i scarfed the MDF where the join was.....with a bit of filler and a couple coats of paint...i cant even see it.
With due respect to others opinions....it is only skirting.....go MDF and save the real timber for something more worthwhile.
Just my 2c worth
Steveif you always do as you have always done, you will always get what you have always got
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2nd December 2005, 08:51 AM #10Senior Member
- Join Date
- May 2005
- Location
- Melbourne
- Posts
- 149
I think I'll spend the extra. I guess in the overall scheme of things, a couple of hundred bucks isn't much.
Can anyone recommend what type of glue I should use?
And can I ask why the opposition to MDF when they will all be painted a gloss white anyway?
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2nd December 2005, 09:23 PM #11
I think for most of us it's aesthetic reasons. We're woodies, not compressed_sawdusties.
MDF has the advantages of being cheap, relatively stable and easy to work, but the dust is nasty stuff to breathe in. Wear a dust mask when cutting/sanding.
- Andy Mc
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