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Cold? In Georgia? ;)
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the post are embedded?
so no mud sill? |
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Hey guys I made some good progress yesterday as I got one 28 ' wall section almost completely studded up . This morning I have to finish the framing for a 3 ' entry door and that one side will be complete . It was dark when I finished so I'll take a few pics today .
I will start on the 2nd 28 ' wall today and with a little luck might get that done today also . The 24 ' back wall will be next and I'll finish with the front . That will be the most challenging for me as I have never framed up for garage doors and/or built laminated header beams . I have been reading online how to make them so I think I get it . It's nice to be able to learn something new . I will say lifting/setting wall sections 8 - 10 ' wide by almost 12 ' tall made of 2x6's is a challenge by myself but so far have been able to do it with no self inflicted injuries :D That and getting the bolt holes to line up on the bottom plate . I'm glad I'm only doing this once . And my cheap Harbor Freight air framing nailer is working like a champ ;) I only had one jamb all of yesterday . I start the day adding some oil in the nailer and she's been purring right along , well worth the money . I will post pics later . SmileWavy |
Something that I did in my garage expansion that I’m really happy with, I used 3/8 thickness pegboard for the lower walls. 4x8 sheets vertical so I have essentially a full 8’ worth of space for hanging just about anything. The pegboard came pre-finished in white with an easy to scrub glossy finish. The upper section is painted OSB. The final product looks quite good and best of all, I didn’t have to mud and tape my walls!
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Hey whipped in my last garage I had pegboard the full length of my workbench and I will probably do that again with this garage . Not going to do the side walls as I have wall cabinets that will be installed . Yes I used the pre-painted white pegboard also . Back in the late 70's I purchased for almost nothing 1/4 " peg hooks that are about a foot long . I have carted them from N.Y. to FL. and now to GA. but they are very $$$ now so glad I had the vision back then . I cut them to the desired length , bend the end a little and hit it with a file to knock down the sharp edge works great .
I am also using OSB for the interior wall sheathing vs. sheetrock , I like the ability to hang anything anywhere I want ( pictures/posters/light stuff ) and not have to search for a stud . Plus the added rigidity to the building and maybe a hint of insulation value . Downside is it burns vs. sheetrock . I also like the way it looks once painted . |
A couple pics for your viewing pleasure :D I will finish this wall this morning have to frame up for the entry door . I know it doesn't look like much but that was hard work to do by myself . But getting this far in one day is good motivation so I will get back out there right after sending these pics . Weather here is supposed to get ugly tonight with possibility of sleet and flurries so not sure how tomorrow will go .
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1512654947.jpg http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1512654947.jpg |
Looks great. Working by yourself is so slow. I'm building a pretty complicated deck myself right now and it is a chore.
What are you using to tie the bottom plate to the slab? |
As others mentioned, tossing on some 2x4 to cross-brace will keep that beauty nice and square while you are working on it.
Wood sheeting (not particle board) will probably do it from there. You could later even router-out channels to embed flush 1x6 or something like that. |
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Not going to get much done today , temps dropped and currently it's snowing large flakes . Could get up to 3 " today which is a lot for here . So I'm cruising CL and found someone selling 19/32 BC sanded plywood for 17.00 per sheet if purchased in a bundle of 29 sheets . Compared to box stores at 29.97 a sheet seems like a good deal . Any reason not to use this for exterior sheathing ? I can save 5.00 a sheet going with 7/16 OSB but I'm sure the plywood is stronger . Not sure what my final exterior finish will be but probably will either be vinyl siding or cement siding .
I'm figuring I'll need about 34 - 35 sheets to completely cover the exterior . Go with the plywood ? I will be finishing the interior with OSB . |
Forgot to mention my walls are 2x6 spaced at 24 " on center .
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Plywood is a better choice than OSB for exterior sheathing. Personally, I don't use OSB for any application, but that's your choice.
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Yeah I figured plywood is the better way to go . Found another guy on CL selling 1/2 " CDX that was removed from somewhere . He has LOTS of it and more coming in ( that's what the ad states ) . Most is painted white on one side and it's 10.00 a sheet . He states it's in good shape just has screw holes . I like the idea of saving some coin and being painted I can place the painted side out which will give me some weather protection to the wood until I can get siding installed .
I might just go ahead and buy 70 sheets and use on the interior also , being painted already saves me from priming at the very least . |
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I won't use it on anything.
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"they" always say" it's just as good as plywood"....BS
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OK OK plywood it is :D Didn't do anything on the building today , it's been in the low 30's all day and snowing I'm not motivated to go out in that crap ! Looks like the W/E will be the same so maybe get back on it on Monday .
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I bet your houses don't have plywood sheathing! The walls aren't going to cave in or collapse if you use OSB.
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I have remodeled a fair amount of my house, and added onto it. Everything I've touched has plywood for exterior sheathing. The entire roof is sheathed with plywood, as well. From what I can tell, there's not a single sheet of OSB on it anywhere. It was originally built before people were using that crap.
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