Getting Plaster And Dot And Dab To Stick To Airtight Membranes — Intelligent Membranes

Getting Plaster and Dot-and-Dab to Stick to Airtight Membranes

A cured liquid airtight membrane is smooth — great for airtightness, but plaster, adhesive and dot-and-dab need something to grip. That’s where a bonding primer comes in.

Supergrip primer so plaster bonds

The problem

Plaster, board adhesive and dot-and-dab can struggle to bond to a sealed, low-suction membrane surface. The risk is hollow spots, debonding boards and cracked plaster — failures that appear after the finish is on and are expensive to put right.

The solution: Supergrip Primer

Supergrip Primer gives a smooth membrane a high-grip key so plaster, dot-and-dab and adhesives bond firmly over Passive Purple and other coatings. It lets the airtight layer and the finish work together instead of fighting each other.

How it is applied

  • Make sure the membrane is fully cured and clean
  • Apply Supergrip Primer to create a textured key
  • Plaster, dot-and-dab or bond boards once ready

Benefits

  • Strong key for plaster and adhesives
  • Lets you finish directly over the airtight layer
  • Reduces hollow spots and debonding

Frequently asked questions

Can I plaster straight onto Passive Purple without it? A primer is strongly recommended to guarantee adhesion on the smooth membrane.

Does it work under dot-and-dab? Yes — it keys the surface for adhesive dabs as well as wet plaster.

See the full build-up in How to Make a Building Airtight.

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