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#1 |
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Member
Trade: taping and spackling
Join Date: Mar 2009
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Attention banjo users
Can a fast banjo user please make a video, please include this list.
1. mixing and filling it put in tape and close. 2. taping butt seams and flat seams on walls and then ceilings and wiping. 3. corners both ups and tops I want to see a good banjo user post a video please..thanks... |
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#2 | |
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Senior Member
Trade: taper
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: canada
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Re: Attention banjo usersQuote:
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#3 |
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Senior Member
Trade: taper
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: canada
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Re: Attention banjo users
I was looking for one Homax banjo video I'd once come across, and came across another one instead. Video link is about 1/2 way down the page: http://cgi.ebay.com.au/HOMAX-BANJO-6...3A2%7C294%3A30
Makes me almost want to take up stiliting. ~ I'll see if I can find the one I was looking for after. It will give you a video addressing your #1 on your list, and some of your #2. |
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#4 |
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Member
Trade: taping and spackling
Join Date: Mar 2009
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Re: Attention banjo users
Thanks that was good, that guy knows how to use it. I think I may buy one, but I see the price from australia on e-bay is 100.00. I googled it and found one for less than 50.00.. Keep sending more vids thanks..
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#5 |
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Senior Member
Trade: taper
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: canada
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Re: Attention banjo users
If you're buying a Homax, a couple things to consider - see consumer reviews:
http://www.amazon.com/Homax-6500-Dry.../dp/B000ULBC6K You might want to consider picking up a backup banjo at some point, just in case. But depending on how it landed, I wouldn't want to have any banjo fall off a scaffold. But the Homax does seem an easy banjo to manoeuvre. It's also why I chose my Ames Cobra - short enough to get around easily enough inside places like closets; no real balance handling issues because of its design, even if I'm using a full 500' tape roll at the start. It would be interesting to see how having the wheels out front on the Homax would serve for things like setting ceiling tapes, when compared to something like my banjo with its cutting nose, which I use for tape setting at times. I might just pick up a Homax and try it at some point. More experimenting. ~ The site I was looking for seems to be eluding me. But for now, some pics on loading a banjo that I'd come across at one time: http://www.rd.com/advice-and-know-ho...cle115305.html For myself, I often just mix about 1/2-2/3 of a 5 U.S. gallon bucket to the thinness I want - so it's pourable easily enough, but not runny - then pour it out of that into the banjo as needed. Or if I don't need much thinned down mud, I might use some out of a bucket already thinned down for boxing. It can be a little thicker, though, than if I mixed a pail specifically for my banjo. |
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#6 |
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Senior Member
Trade: drywaller/taper/texturer
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: brandon manitoba canada
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Re: Attention banjo users
ya know i have never even considered buying or using a banjo, but all this talk and video viewing has sparked an interest/curiosity in me to give this thing a whirl.
I've always had tubes as my back-up to the auto-tapers in case of jam-ups,cable breakage etc., or large job sites that the taper could do the flats/butts and another set a guys could run the corners with the tube. Is the banjo more productive/faster than the tube? |
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#7 |
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Super Moderator
Trade: Drywall Contractor / Hanger
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: KCMO area
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Re: Attention banjo users
My taper is about 2-3 times faster with a bazooka than I am with a banjo. If you have two and a laborer filling one all the time, you can shave some time. Despite the widespread use of bazookas, I still believe the banjo really does a better job. Fewer mud voids behind the tape, but it is slower.
Last edited by Darren@Partners; 05-12-2009 at 09:06 PM. |
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#8 |
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Senior Member
Trade: taper
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: canada
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Re: Attention banjo users
One thing I found slowing me down with a banjo is the 'pull' the mud in a banjo can create on a tape, pulling it away from its starting point too much if I'm not careful/watchful enough when trying to make some speed on longer runs. I'm thinking of trying something like temporarily pinning the tape at the beginning of some tape runs, and pulling the pin when I go back to wipe the tape down. I'm also thinking something like pinning might also allow for keeping the tape tighter, so maybe less tape bunching up problems when wiping. Anyone with any other ideas for dealing with such?
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#9 |
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Super Moderator
Trade: Drywall Contractor / Hanger
Join Date: Dec 2008
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Re: Attention banjo users
It is something that takes some time to get used to. Over time, has become second nature. Can see how someone who never used anything but a bazooka would have to adjust to it. I think one would have a lot of trouble trying to keep track of pins & probably wind up pulling them out anyway. I usually just use my left hand to hold the tape as I pull down a long run.
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#10 |
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The Happy Taper
Trade: The Happy Taper
Join Date: Feb 2008
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Re: Attention banjo users
JustMe you need more experience from what it sounds like. Also to help you out a bit speed takes time and reinventing the wheel will slow you down, like your pinning idea. JustME put the time in and you will get better period. If you really want to be a professional at this trade a bazooka is the way to go.
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#11 | ||
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Senior Member
Trade: taper
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: canada
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Re: Attention banjo usersQuote:
One reason I'm thinking all this: I'm thinking that I might like to run firmer mud at times in a banjo, and get it on as quickly as possible, so that it might dry quicker and a first boxing coat could be put on sooner. Quote:
Another thought: How about not spending time trying to cut the tape at corners, when taping out say 4' high horizontal flats, but cut it later with your knife when you go around wiping the tape down. Anyone do that? |
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#12 |
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Super Moderator
Trade: Drywall Contractor / Hanger
Join Date: Dec 2008
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Re: Attention banjo users
Firmer mud is part of your problem. That causes the tape to migrate thru the mud inside the box. Mudstar is right on reinventing the wheel. If drywall is a temporary vocation for you, you should save yourself the frustration and move on sooner than later. This trade, like most, takes years to learn, despite what the youtube vids would lead you to believe. After some two decades at it, I still get schooled once in a while.
PS: Go ahead and try to hold up a banjo and work a staple gun. Tell us how that works out for you
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#13 | |
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Member
Trade: taping and spackling
Join Date: Mar 2009
Posts: 88
Thanks: 0
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Re: Attention banjo usersQuote:
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#14 |
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Member
Trade: taping and spackling
Join Date: Mar 2009
Posts: 88
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Re: Attention banjo users
good feedback fellow spacklers---keep it coming..I want to see a goood video with a banjo runner..I have been a loyal bazooka runner, but after seeing that homex video, I may try it for smaller jobs.
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#15 |
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Super Moderator
Trade: Drywall Contractor / Hanger
Join Date: Dec 2008
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Re: Attention banjo users
Homax banjo looks good on video, I suppose. Another poster said it had parts to clean. I'd stick with a good ole Denver box with a hand strap. They're pretty tough to beat. Clean-up doesn't involve any disassembly.
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#16 |
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Senior Member
Trade: drywaller/taper/texturer
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: brandon manitoba canada
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Re: Attention banjo users
what part of the world do live in tapingfool just curious as to what a spackler is i think i herd the term used by a painter a while back.
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#17 | ||
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Senior Member
Trade: taper
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: canada
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Re: Attention banjo usersQuote:
But there's a few things I haven't discussed on this board, or very briefly mentioned at times, that makes me think I should continue on with it for a time. But the line of thought also goes on to say that 2 conflicting views could both be considered right in some ways, but both could still be wrong. ~ I can understand your frustration point, but my skills have reached a level where my checkout is second only to the best taper in the company that I'm doing work for. They've also had me do checkout on some of the other tapers' work at times in the last while - I can be a bit of a perfectionist when I want. I'm now just looking more to increasing speed for some things, while still hopefully improving quality. I'll incorporate some of what I learn from trying different things into some of the equipment prototypes I'm building. As for this trade taking "years" to learn, that could very well be true. But I try to speed such up as much as possible when it seems to make sense. At least speeding up my learning the more major points. Quote:
's. Guess it won't work. ~Yet I and others in the videos can handle a banjo with one hand, while holding the tape with the other. And I've wiped down tapes at times while at the same time banjoing an 8' high horizontal flat off one of my mini-scaffolds. That way I didn't have to go back again after to do it. Maybe my choice of banjos is also a help when it comes to being able to do such? Here's another one: How about being able to banjo an 8', maybe even up to 9' high ceiling - at least the flats - without using something like stilts or a scaffold? |
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#18 |
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Super Moderator
Trade: Drywall Contractor / Hanger
Join Date: Dec 2008
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Re: Attention banjo users
At 6' even I can reach w/o stilts on 8' work ( for I/S walls and butts). Typically on 9' work, I'll be on stilts anyway.
__________________
www.partnersconstruction-drywall.com |
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#19 |
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Senior Member
Trade: taper
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: canada
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Re: Attention banjo users
I'm 6', too. A # of the tapers I was working with are pretty vertically challenged, though.
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#20 |
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Super Moderator
Trade: Drywall Contractor / Hanger
Join Date: Dec 2008
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Re: Attention banjo users
I suddenly see a lot of interest in banjo use. To me, it's a little like framers never having learned to swing a hammer cuz all they ever used is a nail gun. I suspect this sudden banjo interest may be due to the slow down and guys not able to keep up bazooka rent? I know the auto tools are here to stay, but shame on those who break in new help on them while skipping over teaching the banjo. Banjos have always had their place in the trade, small jobs, fire-taping, etc. Why dirty up a bazooka for 1000 feet or drag it up into an attic?
__________________
www.partnersconstruction-drywall.com Last edited by Darren@Partners; 05-16-2009 at 04:46 PM. |
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