Installing Drywall
Installing Drywall
Installing Drywall
by Charles Wardell
Ceilings first. The ceiling panels should be installed before the walls,
and a flat substrate makes the drywaller's job a lot easier. One technique
es for wiring runs, and the wide face of the 1x3 makes a big target for the
screw gun. Here a 16-ft. sheet of drywall is muscled into place. Even
el out a warped or bowed joist, the gaps between them make handy chas-
is to cover ceilings with 1x3 strapping. The straps can be shimmed to lev-
their aggressive threads provide tenacious holding power. Manufacturers recommend in. minimum penetration into the substrate.
Type-S drywall screws have smaller threads.
backing boards. They have alternating high and low threads that
an electric screw gun, I bought a Disston countersink tool, called the Dimpler, for my electric
problems. C. W.
Twirl and cut. You can mark circular cutouts with a compass made from a screw and a piece
of the paper used to bind pairs of of drywall sheets at their ends. Plunge a drywall saw through
the face paper to make your cut.
(photos above).
with a special bit. It uses a highspeed in. drill bit with sharpened
Saw and slice. Another way to cut holes for outlets is to first hang the drywall right over the
boxes. Then use a drywall saw to cut around the interior of the box. Remove the waste and enlarge the opening with a utility knife.
Let's rockThe drywall trade isn't tool-intensive. Henderson, for example, does just about
wedge. A Sureform plane can be handy for carving the edges of a drywall sheet. You can make a
der a drywall sheet, T-braces prop up ceiling panels while the panels are screwed to the framing.
Drywall panels are cut by scoring and snapping. With a sharp utility knife, a clean cut is
made through the paper face, slightly penetrating
the gypsum core (top right photo, p. 40). The
joint is then snapped back to break the core,
change blades often. To keep them from clogging, I spray the blades with graphite lock-spray.
Sheets should fit without being forced into position: tapered edges next to tapered edges, butt
drywall should be supported at the wall intersection by the gypsum board affixed to the studs.
And the best way to make that happen is to hang
to the ceiling.
Once upon a time you could visit almost any
On a three-sided cut around a window, the inside leg of the cut is scored on the back of the
sheet before it's hung. Once the sheet is up, the
Types of drywall
A sheet of drywall consists of a gypsum
for at least part of its width. Of course some angles start right at the floor. In these cases Henderson uses a full-width cutoff to measure his angle
(bottom left drawing, facing page). Whatever the
stilts. Henderson, for example, hangs high ceilings from staging platforms, and low ones while
-in. sheet
skills, try back blocking. Install nail blocks between the joists and a length of strapping across
joints. The paper can curl back and lift the tape.
the outline of the surface while the pencil nestles in the tail. To cut irregular shapes and curves,
use a coping saw, a keyhole saw or a jigsaw.
sheet-metal shears to snip the bead. For wall corners, he cuts the bead about in. short for fit,
and he pushes the metal tight to the ceiling. The
This is one place where drywall nails are acceptablein fact they're preferred over screws
larger than
ing. Henderson scribes with a scrap piece of drywall or wood cut into the shape of an arrow (bot-
in place in the event of errant bumps from furniture or shoes. The length of the nails will depend
on the thickness of the drywall. They should penetrate the framing in. to in.
in.
square or plumb, there won't be any big gaps beneath the corner bead.
a sheet over them and then cutting out the openings afterward. Window and door headers are
perfect spots for butt joints. But make sure the
wainscoting. C. W.
for drywall, plaster and cement board construction is the 500-page Gypsum Construction Handbook from USC (125 S. Franklin St., P. O. Box