Can not decide what material or thickness to use on shop walls & ceiling.
Possibilities I have thought of:
Walls - 5/8" or 3/4" MDF or 1/2" Luan
Ceilings - 1/2" Luan
Any suggestions will be appreciated. I need several options since material
in this area has zoomed up in price since Katrina.
Also, any value in putting 3'4" sound deadening board between the studs
before wiring & putting in insulation?
Steve in Louisiana . . .
"Steve DeMars" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:mH2Hf.86508$4l5.16254@dukeread05...
> Can not decide what material or thickness to use on shop walls & ceiling.
>
> Possibilities I have thought of:
>
> Walls - 5/8" or 3/4" MDF or 1/2" Luan
>
> Ceilings - 1/2" Luan
>
> Any suggestions will be appreciated. I need several options since
> material
> in this area has zoomed up in price since Katrina.
>
> Also, any value in putting 3'4" sound deadening board between the studs
> before wiring & putting in insulation?
>
> Steve in Louisiana . . .
>
>
Steve,
I would use 1/2 insulated particle board. (The insulation is laminated on
one side and is a thin foil layer.) It works remarkably well and is easy to
install. For me, I would then cover it with 1/2 drywall for a clean
appearance or at least prime and paint it.
Dave
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Well what about wood paneling on walls?
Wood be wood . . .
Steve
"George" <George@least> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> "Steve DeMars" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:Zk3Hf.170716$oG.86295@dukeread02...
> > Drywall is 42 cents per square foot here for 1/2" and it damages easily
.
> > .
> > .
> >
> > We have a heavy demand for drywall . . . " KATRINA"
> >
> >
> > "Chris Friesen" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> > news:[email protected]...
> >> Steve DeMars wrote:
> >> > Can not decide what material or thickness to use on shop walls &
> > ceiling.
>
> You probably also have a building code there. Your insurance company
would
> take it as an opportunity to avoid paying a claim if you violated it with
> flammable materials on walls and ceiling. Of course, you might get hit by
a
> hurricane before you caught fire ....
>
>
"Steve DeMars" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:Zk3Hf.170716$oG.86295@dukeread02...
> Drywall is 42 cents per square foot here for 1/2" and it damages easily .
> .
> .
>
> We have a heavy demand for drywall . . . " KATRINA"
>
>
> "Chris Friesen" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>> Steve DeMars wrote:
>> > Can not decide what material or thickness to use on shop walls &
> ceiling.
You probably also have a building code there. Your insurance company would
take it as an opportunity to avoid paying a claim if you violated it with
flammable materials on walls and ceiling. Of course, you might get hit by a
hurricane before you caught fire ....
Steve DeMars wrote:
> Drywall is 42 cents per square foot here for 1/2" and it damages
> easily . . .
You can buy 1/2" lauan for less than $13.44 for a 4x8' sheet? Even if
you can, I'm not sure I'd want it...lots of the wod they use for the ply
puts out some really fierce splinters.
--
dadiOH
____________________________
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...a help file of info about MP3s, recording from
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Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico
My choice is 1/2" plywood for the walls - so I can hang anything I want,
anywhere I want. Would probably paint it a light color.
1/2" Sheetrock for the ceiling - because it's cheap,
needs to be bright, and I like smooth ceilings
--
Charley
"Steve DeMars" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:mH2Hf.86508$4l5.16254@dukeread05...
> Can not decide what material or thickness to use on shop walls & ceiling.
>
> Possibilities I have thought of:
>
> Walls - 5/8" or 3/4" MDF or 1/2" Luan
>
> Ceilings - 1/2" Luan
>
> Any suggestions will be appreciated. I need several options since
material
> in this area has zoomed up in price since Katrina.
>
> Also, any value in putting 3'4" sound deadening board between the studs
> before wiring & putting in insulation?
>
> Steve in Louisiana . . .
>
>
If you can find it, 3/8" rough sawn plywood makes a nice wall.
The 1/2" luan is not a bad choice. MDF is going to be awful heavy
for a wall section.
The ceiling would be the 3/8" I mentioned earlier.
It's currently $18 per sheet here in south eastern N.C.
Sheetrock is an option at about $9.00 a sheet but requires a
good bit of work to hang,tape,finish,paint.
The wood wall will stand up to a lot more abuse than anything
else.
Steve DeMars wrote:
> Can not decide what material or thickness to use on shop walls & ceiling.
>
> Possibilities I have thought of:
>
> Walls - 5/8" or 3/4" MDF or 1/2" Luan
>
> Ceilings - 1/2" Luan
>
> Any suggestions will be appreciated. I need several options since material
> in this area has zoomed up in price since Katrina.
>
> Also, any value in putting 3'4" sound deadening board between the studs
> before wiring & putting in insulation?
>
> Steve in Louisiana . . .
>
>
Drywall is 42 cents per square foot here for 1/2" and it damages easily . .
.
We have a heavy demand for drywall . . . " KATRINA"
"Chris Friesen" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Steve DeMars wrote:
> > Can not decide what material or thickness to use on shop walls &
ceiling.
> >
> > Possibilities I have thought of:
> >
> > Walls - 5/8" or 3/4" MDF or 1/2" Luan
>
> Any particular reason not to use drywall?
>
> Chris
In article <[email protected]>,
Pat Barber <[email protected]> wrote:
> Sheetrock is an option at about $9.00 a sheet but requires a
> good bit of work to hang,tape,finish,paint.
For my turning shop, I hung 5/8" drywall - pretty solid stuff and takes
a good hit before punching through - easy to touch up any dings with a
dollop of compound. I totally skipped the taping and mudding of the
joints - just painted semi-gloss (or was it high-satin) on the hung
panels. It was inexpensive, easy to hang and cut holes for the outlets,
easy to paint and entire sections are easy to replace if need be by just
pulling the easily found, non-mud packed screws. Did I mention it was
easy?
--
Owen Lowe
The Fly-by-Night Copper Company
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