TransWikia.com

Mesh tape for butted drywall joints

Home Improvement Asked on January 18, 2021

I am interviewing drywall finishers and one guy told me he wants to use mesh tape for all butted joint and paper only for inner corners. I am skeptical because all my previous finishers used paper for butted joints (in addition to corners) and used mesh only basically for special situations, such as bigger holes. I hear that mesh is less strong.

Is it okay to use mesh tape for butted joints and will it result in a weaker joint?

4 Answers

Mesh tape is all I've used for this century and I've never had a failure. Tape is nothing but a scab. Strength means nothing and to depend upon tape to do any other work means that your other work is flawed garbage.

The ONLY thing you MUST INSIST, is that ANY and ALL installers and/or finishers locate butt joints only over studs or equally sized blocking. If you install drywall right, then it quite literally doesn't matter what tape or mud is used. FACT.

Answered by Iggy on January 18, 2021

Mesh is totally acceptable as long as it's set with hot mud, according to manufacturers.

USG white paper

Westpac

Now, I'm certain that people will (perhaps justifiably) say that they use mesh and all purpose mud all the time and they've never had problems.

Probably the reason most pros don't use mesh is that it's just more efficient to stick to paper and AP mud. Plus, paper and AP work fine the vast majority of the time.

Answered by Aloysius Defenestrate on January 18, 2021

Here's my 2 cents. I have seen many many jobs done in tract shacks coming up in the trade, I have been on multi-million dollar jobs that I have run, and there has never been any joint failure on any mud work regarding the use of paper tape. I have seen it fail when it came to truss roof systems, when the drywall was not fastened properly, but that is the installers, not the mud work.

The only time I have seen issues with tape joints, is using fiber mesh. No it wasn't failure but just a fine hairline crack that would appear in the but joints. The joint is sound, the drywall tight, but at the joint on very close inspection, you can see the mesh exposed, bridging that fine hairline crack. It does not happen everywhere, but it does. With that I do not use the fiber tape on drywall, but only in tile work with thinset.

Answered by Jack on January 18, 2021

Bottom line, pros use paper tape. There is a small but Growing trend to use fibafuse in certain circumstances. I honestly can’t think of any reason why a pro would ever use mesh tape over paper or fibafuse. Some guys like mesh tape on patch work but hands down I’d use fibafuse, especially when patching plaster walls. The only time I would use mesh tape on anything is the grey mesh tape for cement board... that’s it. I seriously would question this guyS skill wanting to use mesh tape on fresh drywall install.

Answered by PennyPincherWannaBeHandyMan on January 18, 2021

Add your own answers!

Ask a Question

Get help from others!

© 2024 TransWikia.com. All rights reserved. Sites we Love: PCI Database, UKBizDB, Menu Kuliner, Sharing RPP