Each to their own, screws everytime for me, had a builder do some for me once and it came away within a year, now screwed in place and will not come off in my lifetimeDo you need to screw it? I avoid screws if I can and stick skirting on.
Sounds like the "straps" are what I'd call timber battens and that they boarded ontonthe battens. That being the case, why not drill, plug and screw these to the brick wall, then fit the skirtings afterwards? TBH that would make for an easler job than trying to correct a flaw in the wall and fit the skirtings in one go - probably less frustrating, tooThanks all it’s old plasterboard walls that were fixed to straps nailed onto old plaster walls, council renovations at the time, so they strapped and sheeted rather than new plaster, so the plasterboard isnt fixed great onto the straps and some of the bottom straps are a little loose...
thanks the only reason for not refixing the grounds is that i would still need to screw the skirtings and my knees are done in so thanks for the reply i will have a think about how to proceedSounds like the "straps" are what I'd call timber battens and that they boarded ontonthe battens. That being the case, why not drill, plug and screw these to the brick wall, then fit the skirtings afterwards? TBH that would make for an easler job than trying to correct a flaw in the wall and fit the skirtings in one go - probably less frustrating, too
You and me both! I sometimes need to sit down on the floor to work on flooring and skirtings which garners the odd comment from my colleaguesthanks the only reason for not refixing the grounds is that i would still need to screw the skirtings and my knees are done in...
If it's a solid background then a few blobs of polymer and a line of foam.Each to their own, screws everytime for me, had a builder do some for me once and it came away within a year, now screwed in place and will not come off in my lifetime