Are you sheathing with plywood?
Is the wall short or is something out of square?
I'd pull that stud, fill in the green plate as best as you can (including PT and glue) and put a double stud back in against the adjoining wall.
Use a little 1/2" with the grain rip instead of a cross cut that's sure to break.![]()
I doubt your building inspector would have any concerns with a spacer in there
or
move the 2x4 over tight to the other wall & nail it back on
Pressure treated. (PT lumber)Thanks for the suggestion. I do have a scrap piece of green so that would be easy. What is PT?
You’re right. The picture looked at first like it was a lot wider than it was thick.That is definitely a 2x4, you can scale it from the 1 1/2" width of the adjacent stud.
I'd pull the stud and move it over tight to the wall, then caulk the gap in the sill plate.
Then you can leave it as-is and let the osb tie the studs together.Yes OSB
Spacer is a-ok. the sheeting does tie it together, but the spacer and the walls nails together is 100 times stronger. If you have a double top plate, like civilized people, such strength is not really needed. A lot of people nowadays don't do a double top plate, so I didn't want to assume. A lot of people nowadays also have neck tatoos. So I don't always go by "a lot of people".
Yes OSB
I know this is not related to what you are asking, but are you going to have OSB end right at the concrete? It just seems like you're going to have issues with the bottom edge of the OSB absorbing water & moisture being that close to the finished grade outside.
I would never move that stud. Ripping it out could ruin the ends of either the stud or the bottom plate, or both, depending how it is nailed. And then it sits on 3/4" of the bottom plate and 3/4" of a chunk of something and is nailed to what? I'd install a spacer.
So, go to the basement and get a pair of skyhooks.I cut it twice and it still was too short.
