Quite right. I forgot all about this vid. It really needs to come down as using NHL for internal works is something I no longer like to practise. I only use it if I have a customer who wants the work pushed along a more quickly. Otherwise it's putty or hotlime. Ironically, I'm now back at Kidlington plastering which is where this video was taken.
Can I be pedantic about your pedantry? I don't think anyone is suggesting that houses inhale and exhale gasses when they say a house breathes. When a material is called breathable, it is widely understood to mean vapour permeable.
@@dkaloupis75 Sorry mate, but I can't give techniques and skills away. It took me a long time to learn them and it cost much in time, money and effort. I appreciate what you're saying but if I tell everyone then everyone knows how to do it and there's no more work for me.
Dimitris K , Presumably you can't read then ? We can teach ourselves absolutely anything from reading about it ......the practical skill though, cannot be taught or learnt, except by hard physical and mental application ; an awful lot of error and the time required, happily spent . .
If i drive nails in this one , or remove a but while putting in my electrical conduits, will the plaster around hold? Or will it come off from one edge and then all at once successively?
I appreciate your efforts but can you ramble on less and refine explanations of the techniques and mechanics of products you are using . I was really interested in the Efforvescence as I have Issues with my 1976 brick house .
I'm a rambler. I'd never get any TV unless it was for a stuttering idiot. Effervescence is the process of impurities leaching out of lime mortar. This is why we never use unwashed sand. Normal building sand is not appropriate because the shite workes it way out of the porous mortar. And it looks rubbish. So sand is just as important as the type of lime.