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OSB for interior walls - prime/paint before hanging? etc

liljestrom

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Jan 16, 2019
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I have a garage with romex and outlet boxes that is 32x36 and will put OSB on the walls. I'll have to cut out for the boxes and a couple of windows. Previously I have done this and primed and painted after it was up.

I'm thinking hang it all then prime/paint.

Does if make any sense to prime/paint the sheets then cut out OR prehang/take down and prime/paint?
 
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545_days

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It's easy enough to roll paint onto walls. What do you gain by painting before hanging it other than the fastener heads being unpainted?

I would think that managing multiple sheets while painting one side would be a nuisance as well as an opportunity for the OSB to warp and make hanging it more difficult as well.
 

mike93lx

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Paint in place. It's one thing to prepaint detail stuff like trim, but I wouldn't do wall cladding like that.

Renting a sprayer would cut the time massively, just cover absolutely everything else in plastic.
 

larry4406

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We used to have one of these style paint rollers where the handle is a giant syringe full of paint.

Worked great.

 

mike93lx

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We used to have one of these style paint rollers where the handle is a giant syringe full of paint.

Worked great.

I have a roller attachment for my sprayer... Curious how well it works but I don't really want to find out
 

drmarkr

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Not really what you asked....but I'm going to give you my thoughts anyway.

Strongly consider spending the extra money and getting tongue/groove plywood, instead of OSB. Yea, it's 10-15 more per sheet, but it looks SO much better after you install and paint it. And for damn sure is more solid for heavy cabinet/other things mounted on the walls.

I even used caulk to fill the joints on my vertically installed sheets, which makes the walls look almost seamless.
 

nadogail

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When practical I find it easier to lay the 4X8 sheets of OSB I am using on sawhorses and then roll the primer and paint on them rather than paint over my head. Painting on the flat is much easier than painting over my head.

The pre painted sheets look good from the bottom up, keeps the paint off the ceiling joists.
 

Worsedog

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I also used osb for the ceiling and walls and painted before hanging. Overhead painting ***** and it was less time consuming to throw down plastic or newspaper on the driveway than mask and worry about slopping on the garage floor or in the electrical boxes.
 
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loganb

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When I did it in a garage several iterations ago it took 3 or 4 coats to get good coverage and the osb pattern still showed thru...just an fyi.
 

NUTTSGT

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When I did it in a garage several iterations ago it took 3 or 4 coats to get good coverage and the osb pattern still showed thru...just an fyi.
It's going to **** up whatever you're putting on it. I've had good luck with a couple coats of Kilz oil-based primer and then painting it.
 

u2slow

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Strongly consider spending the extra money and getting tongue/groove plywood, instead of OSB. Yea, it's 10-15 more per sheet, but it looks SO much better after you install and paint it. And for damn sure is more solid for heavy cabinet/other things mounted on the walls.

+1 on plywood.

1/2" was enough for me. T&G started at 5/8". Painted it after it was up.
 

loganb

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I can't imagine any reasonable amount of paint hiding that. But drywall mud as a skim coat would
Kinda wonder what some of the higher quality OSB would be like..some of the Huber flooring products but at that point it'll be cheaper to just go to a BC grade plywood
 

mike93lx

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Kinda wonder what some of the higher quality OSB would be like..some of the Huber flooring products but at that point it'll be cheaper to just go to a BC grade plywood
Advantech is pretty smooth, but I agree, I would also go for plywood instead

I've painted Zip, which is much better than commodity, but it's still really rough.
 

OccupantRJ

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Some OSB used for roof deck has a smoother side and a textured side. The nailing lines are normally on the textured side because that side goes up and the texture helps prevent slipping on the roof during installation. I used the textured side down on my shop ceiling, aligned the joints and bevelled the edges of the sheets to give the appearance of giant textured ceiling tiles.

 
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