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Tuc February 26th 07 09:17 PM

Basement ceiling woes
 
Hi,

A friend is at her wits end about replacing a ceiling in her
basement. It is of the type where they put wood strips across the
joists, and then staples a 1ft square interlock style tile to it. It
seems no one does the 1ft square anymore. She tried to do some sort of
a replacement on it, and although her intentions were good, she really
didn't do a good job. SO, I want to help her out.

There is no way I can do a drop ceiling, since the overhead
clearance is bad to begin with (I'm 6ft 4in and barely make it, then
when I get to the steel beam I have to duck or it'll be disasterous).
So do I just rip all the tiles down, rip out the wood strips (Oh, and
of course for some reason they aren't spaced apart consistently.. some
are 12" apart, some 16", others who knows!) and start from scratch? Is
there a track based system that doesn't need 3 inches between the
joists and the frame to be able to pull the panels out...

Honestly, I'm not really good with carpentry. I don't even do it
on my OWN house. So it would need to be something FAIRLY dummy proof.
Maybe there is an option I haven't thought of? (I suggested putting
contact paper on the ceiling and that didn't go over well. ;) )

CC's to the email address appreciated.

Thanks, Tuc


[email protected] February 26th 07 09:39 PM

Basement ceiling woes
 
On Feb 26, 4:17 pm, "Tuc" wrote:
Hi,

A friend is at her wits end about replacing a ceiling in her
basement. It is of the type where they put wood strips across the
joists, and then staples a 1ft square interlock style tile to it. It
seems no one does the 1ft square anymore. She tried to do some sort of
a replacement on it, and although her intentions were good, she really
didn't do a good job. SO, I want to help her out.

There is no way I can do a drop ceiling, since the overhead
clearance is bad to begin with (I'm 6ft 4in and barely make it, then
when I get to the steel beam I have to duck or it'll be disasterous).
So do I just rip all the tiles down, rip out the wood strips (Oh, and
of course for some reason they aren't spaced apart consistently.. some
are 12" apart, some 16", others who knows!) and start from scratch? Is
there a track based system that doesn't need 3 inches between the
joists and the frame to be able to pull the panels out...

Honestly, I'm not really good with carpentry. I don't even do it
on my OWN house. So it would need to be something FAIRLY dummy proof.
Maybe there is an option I haven't thought of? (I suggested putting
contact paper on the ceiling and that didn't go over well. ;) )

CC's to the email address appreciated.

Thanks, Tuc


Please consider also that such tiles can be very flammable (DAMHIKT),
and the insurance company would probably very much like to see them
go.

J


February 26th 07 11:24 PM

Basement ceiling woes
 

"Tuc" wrote in message
oups.com...
Hi,

A friend is at her wits end about replacing a ceiling in her
basement. It is of the type where they put wood strips across the
joists, and then staples a 1ft square interlock style tile to it. It
seems no one does the 1ft square anymore. She tried to do some sort of
a replacement on it, and although her intentions were good, she really
didn't do a good job. SO, I want to help her out.

There is no way I can do a drop ceiling, since the overhead
clearance is bad to begin with (I'm 6ft 4in and barely make it, then
when I get to the steel beam I have to duck or it'll be disasterous).
So do I just rip all the tiles down, rip out the wood strips (Oh, and
of course for some reason they aren't spaced apart consistently.. some
are 12" apart, some 16", others who knows!) and start from scratch? Is
there a track based system that doesn't need 3 inches between the
joists and the frame to be able to pull the panels out...

Honestly, I'm not really good with carpentry. I don't even do it
on my OWN house. So it would need to be something FAIRLY dummy proof.
Maybe there is an option I haven't thought of? (I suggested putting
contact paper on the ceiling and that didn't go over well. ;) )

See DIY at
http://www.diyonline.com/servlet/GIB...sion.docid=492 .

There is a product out there from at least one vendor, probably more, that
will do what you are looking for. Channels mounted right across joists, and
the panels snap in from below.

Other option is rip it all down, and shoot ceiling area and mechanicals with
black paint- give basement that loft look.

Personally, I prefer unfinished basements- I like seeing the bones of the
place, and you ain't worried about messing up finish surfaces with projects.

aem sends...



Chris Friesen February 26th 07 11:57 PM

Basement ceiling woes
 
Tuc wrote:

Honestly, I'm not really good with carpentry. I don't even do it
on my OWN house. So it would need to be something FAIRLY dummy proof.
Maybe there is an option I haven't thought of?


Drywall. Takes less than 1" of space, and a flat non-textured drywall
surface is relatively simple to repair if/when someone needs access to
the mechanicals.

Map out the ducting, electrical, and water first and have the owner take
pictures so that they know where things are later.

Chris


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