How tall is you trim?How big a vertical gap should the drywall be off the finished floor (not installed yet)? I'm going to install 3/4" hardwood (I think there should be a 1/4" - 3/8" horizontal gap). Are these two gap measurements sort of redundant?
Sole of what?I always run 1/2" off the subfloor. 1/2" off finished floor will not leave much coverage on the sole.
Well you didn't say sole plate "lol"
Redundant term sometimes omitted. I wouldn't refer to the window sill as a sill plate either but technically I suppose that's what it is.Well you didn't say sole plate "lol"
Normally I nail to the studs. Or use a double sole plate if I need a nailer.
Redundant term sometimes omitted. I wouldn't refer to the window sill as a sill plate either but technically I suppose that's what it is.
I nail (screw actually) to the studs too. Covering the sole plate (or sill plate or bottom plate whatever floats your boat) actually strengthens the wall assembly, helps prevent drafts and improves fire stopping.
I've never seen anyone leave say a 2-1/2" gap on lower wall if using 5" trim before and not sure if an inspector would actually approve that. I've also never seen a double sole plate that I can remember. Double top plate is pretty much standard but don't recall ever seeing a double sole plate in drawings or otherwise. Not saying that's wrong do whatever you want I just haven't come across that before.
Gap is typically left at bottom to prevent water damage as the drywall will absorb any water on floor like a sponge.I don't think this a big deal with construction, certainly not when it comes to drywall hanging crews.
The baseboard should provide plenty of coverage ( 3/4" or sometimes 5/8"), even with hardwood strip flooring. Not to mention shoe molding if used.
Like, if I had 96" tall framing, I certainly wouldn't trim any length off an 8 foot piece of sheetrock just for the sake of a gap.
It'd be nice if they did.. Same thing here, they just hide it with trim.I've never seen drywall undercut for flooring....
There's a special drywall edge trim for this.I have seen walls with no base or shoe, where it seems the strip flooring must run under the drywall. Nice look in some instances.
usually the bottom sheet is the last to go up, and lifted to fit the higher sheet tightTemporarily use little scraps of 1/2 drywall when setting the bottom sheet to keep it the right height off the subfloor.
How big a vertical gap should the drywall be off the finished floor (not installed yet)? I'm going to install 3/4" hardwood (I think there should be a 1/4" - 3/8" horizontal gap). Are these two gap measurements sort of redundant?
That's the conventional design. Nothing requires base molding. Allowing the flooring to expand under the drywall with no base molding is another design. We don't wet mop our floors any more, so a mop board isn't as essential as it once was.It seems that you are conceptualizing things incorrectly.
Your finished floor doesn't tuck under the wallboard.
Drywall is typically ~1/2" above the slab / subfloor, to prevent moisture wicking.
The LATERAL gap of your installed hardwood flooring should be spaced off the face of the drywall. And be covered by base molding, so that the hardwood floor has room for movement / expansion.
