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Harry K Harry K is offline
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Default Putting up drywall

On Jul 11, 9:04*pm, Jordan wrote:
On Jul 11, 11:51*pm, David Nebenzahl wrote:





On 7/11/2008 8:48 PM Jordan spake thus:


Im getting ready to drywall one of my rooms and am going to hang it
horizontally. My question is can I run it all horizontal or do I have
to break it up at some point and put one board verticle. I read some
where about some 4-1-4 rule but noting to explain it. My room is 20x26
and the walls are 93 inches high from floor to top of joist (kind of
and odd size).


No real rules here, at least in your case (I'm sure there are "rules"
that help when one is hanging miles and miles of drywall), but keep in
mind that the long edges (the 8' ones, assuming you're using 8-foot
sheets) are tapered, to make good taped edges, while the short edges aren't.


If in doubt, sketch it out before doing it.


--
"Wikipedia ... it reminds me ... of dogs barking idiotically through
endless nights. It is so bad that a sort of grandeur creeps into it.
It drags itself out of the dark abyss of pish, and crawls insanely up
the topmost pinnacle of posh. It is rumble and bumble. It is flap and
doodle. It is balder and dash."


- With apologies to H. L. Mencken


Are 4x8 sheets of drywall actually 48" X 96"? If so it looks like I'll
have to cut some off every sheet.
thanks
jordan- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Yes they are the nominal dimension. Don't forget that you can get
sheets other than 8' long. 2 10' ones will cover your 20' wall with no
cutting for example. 2 12 footers will do the 23' wall and only waste
a 1' cut on one of them. Of course doors/windows affect the
calculations. The game is to eliminate as many butt joints as you can.

If you are doing this the first time, try not to have joints at the
corners of door/window framing - put them in the middle of the run
across the oopenings.

Harry K