JackOfDiamonds
Well-known member
Would it even make sense to make an insulated partition wall and sheath it with OSB? Or would the leaks at the OSB seams defeat the point?
I have a 2-car garage with 2 roll up doors and a post in the middle.
I'm fixing to turn one bay into a shop by framing a 2x4 wall right down the middle, swallowing the post in the process. I will put an exterior-type pre-hung door in the partition. I might as well insulate the partition wall so I can regulate the climate in the shop in the future (the exterior walls of the garage are already insulated.
Because I want to insulate the partition wall, that makes me think I should use drywall. Because that's all I've ever seen before. And I suppose the drywall allows you to fully seal the joints.
Drywall benefits:
I have a 2-car garage with 2 roll up doors and a post in the middle.
I'm fixing to turn one bay into a shop by framing a 2x4 wall right down the middle, swallowing the post in the process. I will put an exterior-type pre-hung door in the partition. I might as well insulate the partition wall so I can regulate the climate in the shop in the future (the exterior walls of the garage are already insulated.
Because I want to insulate the partition wall, that makes me think I should use drywall. Because that's all I've ever seen before. And I suppose the drywall allows you to fully seal the joints.
Drywall benefits:
- Looks like a real wall, not a homeowner hack-partition
- Deadens sound better
- Better fire block
- Better insulation because of fully sealed joints
- Fragile, will probably look beat up in a few years
- pain to hang things because you have to find studs
- Same price as drywall
- Hang anything anywhere (shelves, bike hooks, etc.
- Makes a stiffer wall
- Looks ugly and leaks drafts at the joints



