This is a little off topic but it is about painting. I signed the lease yesterday morning on my new shop. As you can see in the pic below the walls of the shop look awful. I am debating on what to do, to make the place more presentable on the inside. The walls were sprayed with some type of spray on insulation, over the years it went from white to brown. I was thinking about just spraying over it whith some cheap white paint. This stuff is kind of like cotton and I don't know what it has in it. I stopped at this shop back in 83 and can't remember if it had insulation then or not. So any ideas on what to do? I made a sweet deal on an almost new tire machine, and a tire balancer. So it looks like I will be going into the tire business too.
Last edited by david58 on Thu May 08, 2008 4:23 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Hot, humid air is less dense than cooler, drier air. This can allow a golf ball to fly through the air with greater ease, as there won't be as much resistance on the ball.
I've had good luck with the Killz brand of primers. It would stop the color from coming through and give a presentable finish by itself. I'm not sure about the wall texture, but it can be sprayed with the correct set up (old paint gun thinned or cheap texture gun).
MNAirHead wrote:I own commercial and residentail rental property.
I always have 123, etc tinted to a light tan... I use a wide-nap roller on an extension pole to roll it out.
OR run a piece of trim up bout 3" off the ground.. one color on the lower (dark) and white on the upper.. this cuts down on the repaints.
Tim
I don't think you would want to even try a roller in this, we will spray it and Kilz. Kilz is a great idea. I used a broom on a small area of it and it looked quite a bit better, but too much work and too much mess. This stuff may have asbestos in it.
Hot, humid air is less dense than cooler, drier air. This can allow a golf ball to fly through the air with greater ease, as there won't be as much resistance on the ball.
MNAirHead wrote:I own commercial and residentail rental property.
I always have 123, etc tinted to a light tan... I use a wide-nap roller on an extension pole to roll it out.
OR run a piece of trim up bout 3" off the ground.. one color on the lower (dark) and white on the upper.. this cuts down on the repaints.
Tim
I don't think you would want to even try a roller in this, we will spray it and Kilz. Kilz is a great idea. I used a broom on a small area of it and it looked quite a bit better, but too much work and too much mess. This stuff may have asbestos in it.
David.. if you do this.. check your lease.. in my commercial and residential leases, this would be a violation that I'd be able to keep your security deposit.
Well here is the finished product, we broke all the rules.
This is the difference that 10 gallons of Kilz made. The front sliding door didn't get the Kilz treatment not enough paint.
And this guy is something else.
Hot, humid air is less dense than cooler, drier air. This can allow a golf ball to fly through the air with greater ease, as there won't be as much resistance on the ball.