Abandoned Garage into a brand new garage (EP.5)
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- čas přidán 5. 07. 2023
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The drywall should NOT touch the concrete, it will get mold in it. 2nd drywall should always have support at both ends, the drywall should overlap a stud by 2.5 cm. if not the drywall will come of at somepoint, espesally on the ceeling.
As a man who was a drywaller for over 20 years i was cringing the entire time you were hanging it nearly brought me to tears...lol
Yes! I’m a DIY junkie. And have only installed drywall with my husband once. But even I know you should butt up your seams on a stud. Idk if he’s keeping this house or flipping it but don’t be surprised when your drywall starts to sag.
I re-did the electrical in my garage about two years ago under the supervision of a licensed electrician. In a sense, I'm not completely done, but a few things he pointed out I implemented. It's up to code to run the receptacles on all four sides of your shop on the same 20A circuit, but it's not optimal; my electrician recommended I put each wall on a different circuit, and I did. In fact, I ran my shop lights, that plug into an outlet in the ceiling, on their own circuit so I can plug in e.g. a 20A retractable cord reel. Why different circuits? So when you plug in your table saw along one wall you can run e.g. dust collection or other amp hogs running at the same time w/o tripping your breaker.
Watching you hang that drywall made my heart hurt. I just wanted to reach into the screen and help you do it correctly. But kudos to you on your project. Shoot man you’re on your way for sure.
Also, drywall Jack from Habor Freight makes your life so much easier when you decide to do drywall yourself. Then sell it afterwards
A drywall jack is like 50 bucks/day to rent from home depot.
Oohhh man. Drywall install is hurting my heart and my brain.
Quite a wide pallete of skills he demonstrates wouldnt you say???
Drywall should not be touching the concrete at the base, as moisture will wick from the concrete into the drywall and cause mold/mildew issues. I didn't notice any offset at the base when it was being hung.
it shouldn't touch the floor at all not only because of the moisture issue.. but also, if there is movement in the wall, a touching floor could lead to cracks. This is a wood frame construction and based on the environment there might be little expansion and contraction happening.
Same goes for his door openings. Usually, in the header area, you should span the drywall at least 15cm over to the left and right and at least 6cm down to avoid potential cracking.
And his ceiling installation, if you know the walls are not in perfect angle, take an offset of at least 20cm from two sides of a corner and leave that spacing all around, then finally fit in the border pieces.
Also, I am not a pro myself, but I had to learn that by mistakes and how pros do it (even had one over who showed me the ropes), since I had to do the entire interieurs of my house on my own behalf.
you should have had a few outlets with dedicated breakers. Running a shop vac and planer on one 20 amp breaker with blow it (happened to me and had to rewire) and looked like you had a lot of outlets on one 20 amp breaker
I look forward to your videos all week, they’re soo enjoyable to watch. Thank you so much!
Maybe a little more equipment like saw horses, tool belt, stud finder etc. You should of put the dryer vent in before the drywall. Good luck.
Why didn't you put in nail plates so you don't add shelving into the wires years from now? Other option was to keep all the wires above and drop down at all the outlets. For a garage of a woodworker it is too easy to put nails into an electrical wire. Curious if you thought of this and had a reason I'm not thinking about.
For the drywall shaving I use a pocket surform plane. It eats the stuff right up and is easy to run up and down the side
Man, I feel this. Added 5/8 type X in my garage last summer. So bloody heavy!
I would have thought having separate circuits for each side of the garage and a separate circuit for the office would have made a safer long term idea. You are going to be running some serious power tools and the chance for overload is going to be a risk
Dry wall joints not hitting the studs will crack putting some osb in place isn’t going to hold 😂poor work here
IKR!!! 😂
Shhh! 🤣😂🤣
Came to the comments for this
I ranted to my husband about this and he looked at me like I was crazy. Then proceeded to point out everytime it did fall into the middle of a stud properly 😂
Idk why it was deemed optimal to add a furring strip to like every piece of drywall rather than start on the first joist and put one nailer on the partition wall for that edge. Probably would've been much more parts-efficient and a better overall install.
Thank you for not being perfect! Fantastic work. I sometimes get so frustrated making mistakes. Loving the series
I'm glad to see I'm not the only one who can make those mistakes with measuring. Thanks for showing the mistakes as well as the success.
You should be staggering the joints/seams on the drywall.
Shhhh! 🤫🤣😂🤣
that music that starts at 9min is my fave. gets me in the groove everytime I watch these man. keep it up!
Thanks for showing the plan and the re-work!
drywall seems should line up with a stud or joists and code says max 10 20 amp outlets on a circuit
I don't get what your doing with the sheet rock? The vertical joint's are supposed to be at the stud's otherwise there is no support for the joint!
He doesnt know either and he's hanging the crap.
I personally would have used a different circuit for each wall in the garage, so you don't trip when using big items together. Then the lights on a separate circuit. Also might want to install an interconnected smoke detector if the garage is attacted to the house.
I was thinking the same thing.
I was going to say the same thing. Also you may have a couple of 30amp circuits.
I did exactly this, 3 20A 120v circuits and 3 30A 240v circuits. Plus a dedicated garage door opener circuit, light circuit and 30A 240v mini split circuit. All on a 100A sub panel dedicated to the garage.
What i did was two 20amp circuit per wall and alternate the circuit per outlet. This way if you are working in any one area you always have two circuits to use to not overload either one
@@wolf359loki I'll bet he'll be tripping breakers all the time.
He'll probably would get a mini split. That alone will probably trip it.
I think I might have taken a year or even given up if I had to "repair" that garage LOL. Nice job!
Just an idea that helps me, rather than measuring out where the socket is, just put your laser cross on a corner, hold up the drywall, mark where the laser is and then draw around the back side of the socket. No measuring required!
Real good idea! I personally use a red sharpie and do the electrical box face contour with it. Stick the drywall on it and I have a fine red line that give me an idea where to cut. Work fine. Take way more time than the laser trick I guess. Will definitely use it next time the occasion presents itself! Tks for the tip!
Man you're in the ZONE! GOING HAM! LOVE IT! Keep it up brother! Your dream workshop with your little mixing table (editing) in the back. Going to be awesome. That makes that house worth it alone. Adding the 2nd bathroom is an awesome idea too. Make it yours brother keep driving that property value up too. Once you strike it rich here you're going to be in another house soon enough anyway. Family and money.
I felt your pain on cutting the outlets wrong , super frustrating,love your content, GOD BLESS
Rotozip with the rounded end bit, made for drywall, makes quick work of electrical boxes. Even the live ones, just gotta set the depth right on the bit. I usually make a small hole in drywall at top box, so I don’t miss any boxes
Hey brother all drywall seems must land on stud. They will forever move & crack the seem when moisture expands the studs & lumber. Also 5/8 drywall is fire code as you stated but will not pass inspection if seems are not on the studs.
Great Vid! Really digging this series! Where in the world are your nail bags Big Dog?!?!?! Totally would have made life easier with that drywall. Tell Ryobi to send you something! lol
Your going to have a problem none of your joint's have any backing there's no support. When you go to tape and do your mudding there will be nothing behind the sheet rock to push against!
Such a hack job. Feel bad for whoever buys the house next.
Good luck on the roof. I'm literally replacing mine on my own now. If you have to replace the sheathing get the zip system so you can skip the underlayment.
Should have ran wiring like cat 5 for the garage door opener and the sensors
Dryers are nema 14-30r welders are usually nema 6-50r. If you want a welder run a separate 50amp circuit now. You can also use it for a car charger if you ever need. But your dryer circuit and plug will not work. Put your welder plug near your garage foor this way you can weld mig or tig inside or if you are doing stick welding you can do it outside. Also putting it near a garage door is optimal placement for car charger if you ever need
Hey man great video. Going forward i would say the best thing you can do is to not rush the work, I understand you’re on a schedule but when you rush, more mistakes are made.
Breathe and think about what your next step is.
The garage is coming along nicely.
Great vid, you’ll have to treat yourself to some adjustable ceiling props. Nothing worse than having it rested on your head whilst looking for screws. Rooms looking massive now👍
Nice job. Great transformation.
The wall sheeting on the exterior isn't placed right. you can see the sheets aren't breaking correctly on the studs.
The electrical is going to come back to bite you soon. That’s too many outlets on a circuit especially if there will be several power tools in use. Every drywall seam in this room is going to crack since there is nothing supporting it.
I believe you can have up to 12 outlets on one breaker but yes. They will be tripping breakers. There's so many wiring issues here.
Fantastic video. Reminds me of my first outing installing drywall. Where did I go wrong with the outlet measurements???
Your getting there. It’s going to be an amazing shop and house
Seeing your struggle with the drywall made me very happy! Not because I want to see you fail or any ill intent but because I have all the same struggles whenever I do drywall 😂😂😂 What a transformation. Hard to believe what it used to look like. Crushing it
I love that you leave the mistakes in!
Would love to learn about behind the scenes details like permit acquisitions, inspections, etc. Might seem like dry material from a content perspective, but it's quite relevant.
youtubers never pull permits lol
he didn’t pull any permits. hasn’t and won’t. not supposed to do this type of work without a license
with that finished ceiling height, I strongly recommend a side-mount garage door opener
It'''ll be a nice garage for sure!
That electrical will never pass inspection. Also, you don’t have any safety plates on any of the walls were you drill holes for the wires?
Great job but always install outlets after the drywall is installed. It's easier to cut the holes, plus the outlets have tabs that are supposed to sit up against the drywall. Also, all your butt joints are going to crack
Good near job with the wiring. But if you have 12 outlets on one breaker you are maxing out that breaker. Each outlet takes 1.5 amps. You would be at 18amps with 12 outlets. By code you can only use 80% of the amperage. You should add another circuit
Got so excited to see this in my feed
I like to see Ryobi stuff doing great work 👍
Awesome job so far mate. Curious to know though, is there a reason you didnt add the stiffners to the wall between shed and office space? Is it because it isnt a supportive wall or load bearing? Cheers mate
I love this series !
my dude the wire is so much easier to run if you unspool it first. Also, not sure you want all that on one circuit
I’m an electrician by trade and you should not put your outlets in before Sheetrock. Also you should have some GFCI protection in the garage. Nice build.
That's what new work electrical boxes are for though
@@FKS1994 I believe he meant boxes are okay but not the outlets that go into the boxes.
Would have saved some time if landing sheet goods on studs, not having to scab every piece of drywall. In high amperage areas such as kitchens and workshops I always add more circuits than necessary; I also would have dropped an outlet on each wall below your work bench line for vacuums or other equipment that lives below that line. Adding an extra block to switches that land near doors will provide extra room for trim.
Hola! 🖐This is looking really, really good. I'm sure that once you put primer after all the mudding and sanding this is going to be nice BUT when you have this painted it's going to be over the top. Take care and have a good one, Adios!👊
My dad before retirement was a master electrician by trade but could basically build a house on his own as well. He's taught me a trick with nail polish so you know where your holes are. On the electrical box you paint the outer edge with nail polish, press the drywall against the box and you have your outline for the box, cut it out then hang the drywall. Works like a charm and saves on a lot of hassle of mudding holes.
I was using red sharpie! Never thought of nail polish!
You could also use a piece of scrap sheetrock to "chalk" the box and use the same process.
That's way to time consuming.
You mark the box on the floor, with the height to center of box.
Make sure your wires are tucked real good. Hang the boards then router out the boxes after.
It don’t matter he’s not butting the Sheetrock on to the studs it’ll crack n look like poop in no time… plus it’s touching the cement on the floor which will then gain moisture and rot mold n fall apart.
can do that with a piece of drywall as chalk. much easier
Omg this is how all my drywall projects go. Makes me feel a lot better hahaha
Will we get to see you also demo the inside of the house after you finish the garage area?
Of course that’s wat he does
Ahahahahha all the struggles 😂 love it. So relatable ! It looks amazing! You truly did eat 5 whole elephants !
Next time, mark the electric box with dry erase marker or a piece of drywall rubbing the edges of the box, place your dry wall, tap it couple times on the box and you'll have the outline to cut it perfectly.
Woofta. Seams on sheet rock must line up with a stud. Use a handsaw to cut doors out. Use a roto zip for outlets. All of those seems will crack if you mud that... Also, do yourself a favor and buy a sheetrock lift. They are cheap.
The electrical was super hard to watch🤣🤣🤣
Whoa! Tim the tool man!
I love all of the minor failures. Life at its finest. Carry on Sir.
i can feel the shoulder burn from just watching 🤣
I appreciate that you aren’t afraid to show us the mistakes you make and the struggles you have! It gives me the confidence to keep going forward with the renovations at my house that I have going and want to do!
Are you suppose to use a metal plate where the Romex passes through the stud to prevent drywall screws from hitting the Romex??
Only if it's within 1 1/4 inches from the edge
@@croney90 Correct. NEC code requires 1.25 inches from the base of the stud inward. I only question it because the drywall screws were 1 5/8" ... So 5/8" drywall leaves 1 inch of screw in the stud and only 1/4" remaining if the hole drilled was @ 1.25". If he drilled the holes 1.50" then there is 'some' clearance. For me personally I would have installed the plates to be safe.
Should have added it regardless. Such a low cost for a significant benefit. New owners might not know and will use 2 inch screws and accidentally puncture the wires. Just silly not to add it unless you didn't know they existed.
Been waiting everyday for this video ❤️😂
You're the real deal. I really enjoy your content. I can't wait to see it all come together.
Hey Man, don’t be so hard on yourself. I think you’re doing a great job. Like you said, you ran & installed all of the electrical plus you & Tim turned the bare studs into a Room/Garage.
but he didn’t get it inspected..
Standing on a 5 gal bucket doing sketchy sh*t is so darn relatable
Im pretty sure you can get plaster screw guns that are loaded with 100s of screws. Saves you putting them in individually!
nail plates for the wiring
Old trick that I saw during a remodel my husband and I did decades ago: rub brightly coloured chalk (I think the guy actually used a pastel crayon) on the edge of the outlet. Carefully lift the sheetrock into place and press it on the outlet, the chalk transfers and marks the back of the drywall. when you drop it down it's easy to cut out for the outlets - no math or measurement required. Not much help now, but something to keep in mind for the future. Keep up the good work!😊
I prefer to use nail polish! The chalk trick doesn't always give the cleanest transfer
@@fd3871 Good idea!
I would be quite worried running all the outlets on one breaker
Might be abit more work but I found it way easier with my recent Reno’s to before putting up gyprock, get the laser level out, have it line up with each light outlet and power outlet, right down measurement and placement on the floor for lights and just on paper for power outlets, fit off all the gyprock then get laser level back out for cutting out the outlets. I found this way easier and had a bloke on a worksite show me this!
Very curious as of this video how many days had you worked on this garage? Also this is one of funnest series I have watched on YT in a while.
15:05 well that’s why the insulation have the papel on one side so you can staple in to the 2/4 I work on insulation and that’s how I do it on the garage walls
@MrBuiltIt 22:50 “NOTHING WILL MAKE A GROWN MAN CRY LIKE MISSING A STUD” = Amazing t-shirt/sticker idea 😂
Drywall seams need to be on a stud. The whole garage needs to be redone
Great soundtrack man keep using it
The garage is looking good
All of those unsupported butt joints are going to be an issue. Esp on the ceiling.
Is that the battery operated 10 in sliding miter saw? How do you feel about it power and lasting wise?
Been waiting for this video let's gooooo
Another great video great job
Love the people who hate on Ryobi but he has pretty much built and entire garage with them.
Good on ya for doing the work yourself, but watching you hang that sheetrock was stress inducing. So many ways to have done that easier and better.
Save your back next time and get a drywall lift. That type X is heavy.
The Kraft face on your insulation is a moisture barrier.
Watching you struggle bus makes me feel better about my own amateur drywall skills lol. No judgement btw!
Been watching you on rumble. Just popping a like and comment here to help the algorithm!
Garage is really coming together, question about the insulation, was there a reason to not staple it up? I didn't know if it was because of the moisture barrier thing you were talking about? Seems like it would cause a lot of air gaps and the possibility of it sagging inside the walls over time
It will sag and have a big gap at the top, I assume he did it off camera. If not that’s an expensive oops
Microphone Trick. Clip the mic to your hat brim on the side . I saw laura kampf do this and thought it was neat.
Drilling with an impact. Fastest way to kill an impact gun. Nice progress. Would of left a decent gap wit the drywall at the concrete to prevent moisture issues.
Won't help you now, but for future reference you can mark the side of the stud above your outlet & where the drywall lands so that, if you accidently cover the outlet you can easily find it.
Im surprised that metal plates weren't put on the studs where the electrical lines go thru the studs. They are about .45 cents each and prevent screws from going into the wires
I said the same thing! Not an electrician just watched alot of vids.
I know you have probably finished your garage but I seen another video on youtube on how to mark out your electrical boxes you get a piece of the old off cuts of drywall and mark the box round the edges the tap your drywall against it and it marks the placement