Always had this thought... if the gyprocker puts the right amount of glue on each stud, wouldnt the glue help pack the gyprock to plane? Obviously still have to plane studs bowing out but packing 2mm on a stud bowing in?A gyprock screw is only there to hold the material in place until the glue sets... and the screws cant pull in gyrock over 1 stud, they will just sink in if the studs to the left and right of it are good. Just a thought. I find us chippies are always left to dummie proof every other trades jobs. We do all the hard work so that everyone else can just slap there finish on blindfolded.
If you glue and screw to a concavity (inny stud) it will be concave forever. We will go in after sheetrock or Gyp is installed and check one last time with a horizontal straight edge on walls. Or straight edge perpendicular to joists and rafters on ceiling. If there is a hump or crown, we back out the rows of screws at studs to either side of hump. This allows the sheetrock to straighten itself out on either side of the hump. We then run gap filler foam through the (removed) screw holes to keep the sheetrock off the crooked studs. When gap filler is dry, we re-fasten. Same is done where there is a concave pocket on a wall. Remove screws. Wall straightens itself out. Apply gap filler in screw holes.
@endoalley680 so if you have 3 studs, the outside 2 are perfect and the middle stud is 1mm out of plane, you will see that "bow" in the wall? Or do you only see it because you stuck a straight edge on it.
@@rorycoe3311 If you break a butt joint on the crowned stud it will show. If you break the butt joint on a concave stud it may work out favorably. If you have baseboard or crown mould or even just a squared taped angle it may shown. Up the game to 3-5 mm or more out of whack and things really show up bad.
When framing exterior walls u will have a hell of a time if u put all the studs bow down.. the studs will be rocking when building the wall. The studs will be falling over. More over after a top or bottom plate is nailed to the stud the other plate will be difficult to nail off because of the different amount of stud bows making the ends of the studs at different heights…
Thank you.
Always had this thought... if the gyprocker puts the right amount of glue on each stud, wouldnt the glue help pack the gyprock to plane? Obviously still have to plane studs bowing out but packing 2mm on a stud bowing in?A gyprock screw is only there to hold the material in place until the glue sets... and the screws cant pull in gyrock over 1 stud, they will just sink in if the studs to the left and right of it are good. Just a thought. I find us chippies are always left to dummie proof every other trades jobs. We do all the hard work so that everyone else can just slap there finish on blindfolded.
If you glue and screw to a concavity (inny stud) it will be concave forever. We will go in after sheetrock or Gyp is installed and check one last time with a horizontal straight edge on walls. Or straight edge perpendicular to joists and rafters on ceiling. If there is a hump or crown, we back out the rows of screws at studs to either side of hump. This allows the sheetrock to straighten itself out on either side of the hump. We then run gap filler foam through the (removed) screw holes to keep the sheetrock off the crooked studs. When gap filler is dry, we re-fasten. Same is done where there is a concave pocket on a wall. Remove screws. Wall straightens itself out. Apply gap filler in screw holes.
@endoalley680 so if you have 3 studs, the outside 2 are perfect and the middle stud is 1mm out of plane, you will see that "bow" in the wall? Or do you only see it because you stuck a straight edge on it.
@@rorycoe3311 If you break a butt joint on the crowned stud it will show. If you break the butt joint on a concave stud it may work out favorably. If you have baseboard or crown mould or even just a squared taped angle it may shown. Up the game to 3-5 mm or more out of whack and things really show up bad.
When framing exterior walls u will have a hell of a time if u put all the studs bow down.. the studs will be rocking when building the wall. The studs will be falling over. More over after a top or bottom plate is nailed to the stud the other plate will be difficult to nail off because of the different amount of stud bows making the ends of the studs at different heights…
If the wall is a load bearing wall you can still plane it, correct
Absolutely you can
Only down to the member size specified by the engineered plan
How to straighten one side of a stud 😭