Georgia-Pacific Building Products Provides Tips for Wall Sheathing Installation

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  • čas přidán 1. 10. 2019
  • Georgia-Pacific Building Products provides tips for correctly installing plywood and OSB (oriented strand board) wall sheathing products, including product selection, support details, and panel and fastener spacing.
    For more information, please visit buildgp.com/.

Komentáře • 39

  • @joelx77
    @joelx77 Před 2 lety +3

    Great video of wall sheathing tips. Brief and detailed.

  • @007JHS
    @007JHS Před 3 lety +12

    I personally would not nail 'at' the corners... but nail on the vertical and horizontal edges about 2" or 50mm in from the corners... corners can break off... this method is stronger... same for drywall corners too.

  • @luismatos2239
    @luismatos2239 Před rokem

    Buena explicación
    Bien profesional, todo ordenado
    Gracias GP
    👍

  • @YuckFou502
    @YuckFou502 Před rokem

    People are finding it odd to hang these vertical but i think there shear amount of fasteners compensates for strength well enough.
    I'm going vertical on my add-on because they're going to be caulked, sealed & painted with trim over the joints. Should work well enough like that for strength, water and air. Horizontal seems like it'd leave gaps for cold/hot spots in the walls, even if wrapped. Studs having an R value of about 3 is bad enough. I will eventually hang tin up for siding and will incorporate the trim over the joints as spacers for the tin. I suspect my application should give me plenty time until then. My 2 foot overhangs don't hurt either lol
    I'm still on the hunt for the most ideal, low permeability exterior paint if anyone has suggestions

  • @jupiterjac6438
    @jupiterjac6438 Před rokem

    Can someone lmk if you can mount melamine cabinets on plywood? I’m installing a section of uppers this weekend and the wall has sheetrock AND plywood. So I’m a bit worried on the layers I need to go through to hit the stud, my backing is 3/4 the sheetrock 5/8 and the plywood 1/2 I think. Anyone have any suggestions? I usually use 3 inch screws when I install uppers to attach them to the stud. Please any help or ideas will definatly be appreciated!! TIA

  • @KrazyKajun602
    @KrazyKajun602 Před rokem

    I would only install the panels horizontally. This should increase the strength of the wall.

  • @VERYCHEAPDEALS
    @VERYCHEAPDEALS Před rokem

    They say use a 8d common nail but all the stores and building supplies places are saying 2 3/8 rs .113 is the same as an 8d common
    Anyone know if code has changed for putting up 1/2 plywood wall sheathing?

  • @philipdove1705
    @philipdove1705 Před 4 lety +2

    Would 1 1/2" 18 ga narrow crown staples work?

    • @huejanus5505
      @huejanus5505 Před 3 lety

      18 gauge staples have vey little shear strength and holding (pullout) power.

    • @Zeppodone1000mg
      @Zeppodone1000mg Před 2 lety

      Absolutely not , even 15 gauge finishing nails are far too small honestly deck screws work the best to hold panels to a wall or even just framing nails

    • @philipdove1705
      @philipdove1705 Před 2 lety

      @@Zeppodone1000mg I meant for the trim while propping the door up

    • @JustMe-ug2cz
      @JustMe-ug2cz Před 2 lety +1

      @@philipdove1705 This video is regarding OSB wall sheathing. How would anyone know you were asking a question that was regarding something else? I also don't think propping the door up with TRIM is common practice. Perhaps that just some terminology confusion?

    • @JamesR23
      @JamesR23 Před 2 lety

      @@Zeppodone1000mg screws are not appropriate.

  • @CaliforniaCarpenter7
    @CaliforniaCarpenter7 Před 2 lety +2

    I prefer to sheath horizontally and stagger the butts to avoid perforating the studs every 3" at the joints. Being a former drywall hanger, hanging walls horizontally is like second nature to me, but vertical just seems wrong. I wonder if anyone in these comments knows why exterior sheathing always seems to be hung vertically? There has to be a reason.

    • @michaelodonnell6361
      @michaelodonnell6361 Před rokem +1

      There is. It's called a braced wall system. In the newer 2018 IRC it calls for vertical sheathing for increased strength. I personally like horizontal and staggered joints. However I'm sure alot of engineering went into this new requirement. And nail edge spacing is 3" on all braced wall panels only.

    • @robertsmithjr.5839
      @robertsmithjr.5839 Před rokem +1

      Vertical seems wrong to me

    • @TheToolnut
      @TheToolnut Před rokem

      Vertical sheathing is to increase sheer strength and to prevent racking.

    • @YuckFou502
      @YuckFou502 Před rokem

      Idk but I'm doing it in my add-on because they're going to be caulked, sealed & painted with trim over the joints. Should work well enough like that for strength, water and air. Horizontal seems like it'd leave gaps for cold/hot spots in the walls, even if wrapped. Studs having an R value of about 3 is bad enough. I will eventually hang tin up for siding and will incorporate the trim over the joints as spacers for the tin. I suspect my application should give me plenty time until then. My 2 foot overhangs don't hurt either lol
      I'm still on the hunt for the most ideal, low permeability exterior paint if anyone has suggestions

    • @CaliforniaCarpenter7
      @CaliforniaCarpenter7 Před 5 měsíci +2

      @@karlwithak. You're right, that's another thing about vertical sheathing, it wastes wood - you save board-feet by hanging the sheets horizontally. And the people claiming that vertical sheathing increases strength, I've recently learned that in wind and tornado prone areas, code mandates horizontal for increased strength. And in other areas, all load-bearing exterior walls are required to be sheathed horizontally. So the strength argument goes out the window.
      It's all about money.

  • @bmohamed3423
    @bmohamed3423 Před 3 lety +1

    I thought you have to install sheathing staggered horizontally ?

    • @feralbigdog
      @feralbigdog Před 2 lety

      that would be what i think too, it makes it stronger i think, where a butt joint is on the lower course being strengthened and stiffened by the upper course, or am i mistaken?

    • @wickedbassy
      @wickedbassy Před 2 lety +1

      From what I understand staggering them is more common on roofs and for flooring.

  • @oldskoolwayy
    @oldskoolwayy Před 3 lety +2

    Why does one panel board need so many nails...

    • @mikemike9747
      @mikemike9747 Před 2 lety +1

      yeah, seems like half as many would be just as good

    • @JR-uy3zo
      @JR-uy3zo Před rokem

      So wind don't lift the edges

  • @dwoodog
    @dwoodog Před 3 lety +4

    It's also OK to use deck screws?

    • @gerrybourque7676
      @gerrybourque7676 Před 2 lety +2

      No. Deck screws do not have nearly as much shear strength that nails do.

    • @JamesR23
      @JamesR23 Před 2 lety +1

      Absolutely not.

  • @Stcoadrdfo
    @Stcoadrdfo Před 3 lety +12

    this OSB was $8 in 2019, comes 2021 it is $44. There is no justification for this. I have to finish my walls and roof. After this, I will never use GP.

    • @ThriftDiving
      @ThriftDiving Před 3 lety +4

      Holy moly, that is a huge increase! That's due to COVID restrictions and a slow down in production.

    • @stormshadow1512
      @stormshadow1512 Před 3 lety

      i just did my sub floor and that's what I paid, $44 a sheet of OSB. So pissed.

    • @alkwtf
      @alkwtf Před 2 lety

      Yep total BS, that price is ridiculous!

    • @mikemike9747
      @mikemike9747 Před 2 lety

      insane. I'm not in the industry and needed some. Knew the price was up but didn't realize by how much.

    • @cmleoj
      @cmleoj Před 2 lety +1

      @@ThriftDiving Why do you just pull these assertions out of…the wind? It just looks like greed from American corporations who know they can get away with this #GREED