This morning I woke up and cleaned it up. I had to put down a little more mud on a couple problem areas, and one last sanding. After that I vacuumed up as much dust as I could and got ready to spray textrure. I set up a test piece outside and turned the compressor on. I set the regulator to 70psi and noticed the regulator wasnt just dropping pressure on the outlet but also the compressor. I figured the regulator had failed, but its a decent sized compressor for texture so Ill be fine. After I run it out of air just spraying water, it wont kick back on. I troubleshoot it for a couple hours and realize its about 25 years old and Im pretty sure the motor is just wore out. I call my brother and hes got a small one, so I go grab it. Its like a 10 gallon dewalt but that thing worked like a champ, It fills very quickly, probably not good for our automotive stuff but for construction its pretty awesome for a hobbyist.
This was a one man job, and Im not good at doing knock down texture with just me, between maintaining the consistency of the mud, monitoring how dry the texture is, knocking it down, blocking off certain areas, and cleaning the gun between sprays, its just a little too much. I decided to try knockdown but spray it pretty thin so I could spray it fast and do multiple layers If I have a problem. First two walls went pretty good, its been about 6 years since Ive sprayed texture on anything but a touch up so there was some adjustment period, where I sprayed too thin, but I was able to go right back over it. On the third wall, I went to knock it down and had a big smooth spot, I put a fan on it and dried it real quick then went back over it. I also hit something when knocking it down, and put a big circular knife mark in the wall, fixed it the same way. During the second fill up I noticed my mud was getting too thick, so after i finished that one, I cleaned the gun and thinned the mud. Third fill sprayed perfect, so on the fourth fill I did the same thing...EXCEPT I forgot to empty the hopper before I put the mud in so when I walked inside and sprayed a wall, I just blasted it with water, and before I had noticed it had started spraying mud and I had shot it all over and around the water, so I couldnt just wipe it off without making a bigger problem. I was able to dry it up enough to knock it down then put some more texture over it. I think the texture ended up as a combination of knock down and orange peel. I think it will paint ok. It will probably bother me since I know all the problem areas but I dont think anyone will notice unless they do this.
I got the whole thing textured.
you really cant see it, so a close up of the texture
Next project I wanted to get done was trim out the windows.
Before
I wanted to trim them out in a farmhouse style. You can see the window framing is both super ugly and very close to the actual window, so I couldnt do the inside of the window opening with a 1x4 without actually covering part of the window, so I had to essential make a veneer with thin BC plywood, and because of the layers in the plywood I couldnt do a reveal so they are kinda basic, also the windows are super thin, and recessed much more than I expected so using a 1x6 didnt get me near as much overhang on the window sill as Id like, but I didnt notice til I was pretty much done with the first one.
I did the first one real quick and when I steped back I realized the window opening is not level and so my trim was super crooked. I took it all back down and put the sill in first, shimmed it to level and rebuilt it. After I pulled it all down I cut the trim nails as close to the drywall as I could and then hammered the remains in. I had a dumb reflex of checking for remaining trim nails that needed to be hammered by running my hand over the drywall, which resulted in a bunch of slices on my left hand. I stupidly did it multiple times before putting gloves on. They are worse than angled cut zipties. There is an alarming amount of blood on the drywall behind the trim.
I knew how I wanted to build them, and after I finished the first one, I realized I had never done the bottom piece like this, and wasnt sure how I liked it so I took it down and did it the way I have in the past. I showed the wife both, and she told me how she liked them. I wont tell you guys which one the first one was, but Im curious if you think the angled or straight bottom piece looks best. I built them both ways for each window, and just have one nail holding them in place.
Angled
Straight
Both windows with straight. I forgot to upload the picture with them both angled.
You may notice I didnt plan my plug placement that well and the left window trim covers the outlet. Not sure what Im gonna do there yet, but Ill figure it out.
I have to check out a Ram 3500 tomorrow but maybe Ill start getting the beadboard up under the second level.