OccupantRJ
Well-known member
I'm preparing to put up 1/2" BC plywood walls, and am mulling over the best way to handle the joints. Right now, planning to run the plywood horizontally with staggered joints, but that is not set in stone. I don't like batten strips on the walls, or the look of OSB. I was thinking of spacing the sheets with a 1/16" or less gap, then using a paintable elastomeric caulk to fill in the joints, to give the caulk somewhere to be, allow for expansion/contraction, and hopefully end up with a relatively smooth-joint surface for paint. Another question I had was whether anyone has used vertical-grooved sheets of exterior masonite siding (about 3/8" thick) for an interior shop wall surface? The half-lap aspect of the joints does at least blend into the rest of the sheet's design, giving a wide beadboard look.
Cost of materials at Lowes here is $20 for the plywood, and 17 for the grooved siding, although cost is not the main factor. Any comments, ideas, suggestions? My shop is mostly for refurbishing machines, fabricating, welding, machining, and some supporting carpentry/woodwork.

Thanks,
RJ
Cost of materials at Lowes here is $20 for the plywood, and 17 for the grooved siding, although cost is not the main factor. Any comments, ideas, suggestions? My shop is mostly for refurbishing machines, fabricating, welding, machining, and some supporting carpentry/woodwork.

Thanks,
RJ

