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Tony[_19_] Tony[_19_] is offline
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Default Drywall 9' walls

benick wrote:
"HerHusband" wrote in message
...
Gonna be helping a friend build a new house after a complete burnout.
His ceilings are going to be 9'. what is the standard procedure for
drywalling 9' walls?


We built our own house and had walls varying from 8' to 15'. I
personally
prefer to hang sheets vertically. This ensures all edges are
supported by
framing, and all edges on the wall are tapered for smoother joints (you
would end up with butt joints if your walls are longer than 16', which we
had many). True, it will be a bit more work to tape, but I've always done
it this way and haven't found it to be a big deal.

Another advantage to hanging sheets vertically is you can use standard
off
the shelf drywall 4x8, 4x10, or 4x12, cut to the height of your wall. It
wastes a little drywall, but can save over special order fees.

If you're working alone, hanging sheets vertically usually allows you to
use smaller sheets which means less weight to carry.

If you do choose to hang sheets horizontally, and can't find wider
sheets,
my preference would be a 1' band at the top or the bottom, so you can
maintain tapered edges. Tapered edges allow much smoother joints, and
you'll really appreciate the difference if you have to mount a cabinet to
the wall or something (no "bulge" in the wall from the butt joint).

I put a 1' band at the top of the wall when we remodeled my in-laws
bathroom. I had to climb the ladder to do the ceiling corners anyway,
so it
was easy to do the seam near the top of the wall at the same time. I
would
normally cut down 10' sheets and hang them vertically, but in this
case it
was more efficient to hang the sheets horizontally (less waste).

Anthony




Hanging the sheetrock vertically is wrong because the wooden studs
aren't perfect...Some may bow out , some bow in and some both and if the
layout isn't PERFECT the sheets won't fall in the center of the stud and
you will be adding nailers or trimming off the recessed edge which then
makes it an 8 foot butt joint..Plus any movement , expansion or
contraction with the changing seasons will cause cracks and it highlites
the imperfections in the framing and generally looks like ****...Hanging
sheets horizontally with 12 foot rock covers more (most times the entire
wall) , is much stronger and looks flat..The job I'm on now we used 14
and 16 foot rock as well...Didn't want butt joints in the cathederal
room....You wouldn't hang plywood vertically nor should you hang
sheetrock that way...The only exception is steel framing in commercial
work...Perfect studs and and drop ceilings with no butts on the VERY
long walls where speed is the biggest concern...Using 54 inch rock is
the correct way to do walls over 8 feet high....HTH...


Mine is 9' 6", so 54 inch wouldn't be worth the trouble.

I'm surprised I never see anyone here mention using adhesive when
putting up drywall? It was pretty much standard practice on the jobs
I've seen done and helped with. I think glue would more than make up
for any weakness due to running vertically. As far as crooked studs,
I'm doing this myself and at the moment my time isn't worth much so
sistering a 2x4 to a warped stud isn't going to slow me down much.