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Tier | 0% | 5% |
Price | $10.29 | $9.78 |
Post Date | Sold By | Sale Price | Activity |
---|---|---|---|
05/04/24 | Amazon | $9.70 frontpage |
14 |
Sold By | Sale Price |
---|---|
Amazon | $19.32 |
Rating: | (4.6 out of 5 stars) |
Reviews: | 3,166 Amazon Reviews |
Product Name: | Zinsser 02304 Problem Surface Sealer, Quart, Clear 32 Fl Oz (Pack of 1) |
Manufacturer: | Rust-Oleum Corporation |
Model Number: | 02304 |
Product SKU: | B000BZZ49G |
UPC: | 47719023043 |
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11 Comments
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Kilz is for a different use case.
This is designed for areas of damaged paper, allowing joint compound or spackle to fill without bubbling afterwards.
This is designed for areas of damaged paper, allowing joint compound or spackle to fill without bubbling afterwards.
Yes you are correct. Different products. One problem with this site is people who have limited knowledge of anything acting like they are experts on something. Glad to have someone provide educated and knowledgeable info - absolutely. This isn't really directed at this particular post, but so many ones overall.
Piss off those of us who do 😊
Piss off those of us who do 😊
lol. Ha ha
On the contrary, kilz oil-based spot primer is intended to be used on torn drywall brown paper before you spackle
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The best product to use for sheetrock stains is Kilz Original. It's the go-to stain blocking primer. Also, a cheaper option is Zinsser Cover Stain.
Gardz is not like Kilz, Gardz is designed to seal sheetrock paper so you can further coat it with water based things like compound and paint. If you apply these to raw damaged sheetrock directly, there is a chance that the paper could bubble off the surface of the drywall (the water in the product causing the paper to delaminate). I only used it in my case as a CYA measure, I've never had issues with drywall bubbling but didn't want to proceed with renovations then have to redo some steps because I didn't want to spend $35 on a can of sealer.
It seems to work fine, bonds well to compound and paint. It is a bit of a hassle to apply. It's like trying to paint with a watered down PVA glue, or perhaps heavy whipping cream. Tends to drip everywhere even if you're careful. Also, raw sheetrock paper sucks it up like a sponge so coverage isn't very good.
All in all, a better solution than BIN (Also Zinsser). I used that in the first room I renovated. Same problems as above but it's even thinner (more like whole milk) oh yeah and it's a shellac so you need a respirator (I wear one anyway even for the GARDZ) and you can't spray it. Lastly, it's like $75/gallon and GARDZ is more like $35.
B-I-N® Shellac-Base Primer