7/16 OSB interior walls, skim coated and textured since 1995. Only two spots that joint tape let loose, minor. Nice to hang things anywhere. Never had a screw let loose. For heavy shelves, hit the studs. Sheetrock on the ceiling.
Did I OSB? Not yet.
Did anyone follow the spacing suggestion (1/16?) at the seems or just **** it up to each other?
Did I OSB? Not yet.
Did anyone follow the spacing suggestion (1/16?) at the seems or just **** it up to each other?
Did I OSB? Not yet.
Did anyone follow the spacing suggestion (1/16?) at the seems or just **** it up to each other?

Didn't care. Caulked the seams in the ceiling. I didn't notice that things fit with any precision in the first place. It's OSB, not a Mayan temple.![]()

Close, but not technically OSB. I used LP Smart Siding without grooves primed in 4’x8’ sheets from Menards. I wanted something with a bit “different” finish than OSB, and it is certainly easier to paint provided it is primed. I am just finishing up the details like filling the screw holes and trimming everything, however I am pleased with the product.
The cost is more compared with OSB, however OSB is not cheap either. I do not regret it and would do it the same way over again.
Most people tend to look at my garage build and ask “why did you do it that way” about many of its features, but it’s exactly what I wanted in the location I wanted. Although I have taken some criticism in my build, I always encourage others to do what they want, not what others think you should do, as that’s what makes garage builds interesting.
(I should have added, the posts were designed to be exposed, and 2x6 walls were essentially built between the posts.)
Have you noticed a pattern here and in the other 83 threads about using OSB? Broadly, there seems to be two groups of people. On the one hand, you have those that have actually used it and are satisified with the results. Then you have those who haven't ever used it and are prepared with a long list of reasons as to why we're wrong for using it.![]()

As far as unpainted OSB to finished and painted drywall, I would imagine there is no comparison.
Why would anyone ever put a combustible material as interior walls of a garage?
Because that's what they wanted to do
could afford
felt was best.
Why would anyone ever put a combustible material as interior walls of a garage? No. No OSB. We did move into a home with partial (lower 48") 3/4" PT (unpainted) on the walls. It held up OK for 14 years... Until I ripped it down, insulated it then hung 5/8" firecode drywall. The firecode drywall (painted and finished) has held up extremely well over the last 4-5-ish years.
Why would anyone ever put a combustible material as interior walls of a garage? No. No OSB. We did move into a home with partial (lower 48") 3/4" PT (unpainted) on the walls. It held up OK for 14 years... Until I ripped it down, insulated it then hung 5/8" firecode drywall. The firecode drywall (painted and finished) has held up extremely well over the last 4-5-ish years.
True.
any way you look at it, drywall is cheaper than OSB
I have a hard time believing someone would feel a material that is more combustible, expensive, louder, harder to finish, harder to repair, etc. would be "best" given the alternatives.
I am going to finish the walls of my 30x40 pole barn with LP SmartSide panels like this:
https://www.lowes.com/pd/SmartSide-Common-0-315-in-x-48-in-x-96-in-Actual-0-315-in-x-48-563-in-x-95-875-in-38-Primed-Engineered-Treated-Wood-Siding-Panel/3058153?cm_mmc=SCE_PLA-_-LumberAndBuildingMaterials-_-SidingWoodCompositeAndCement-_-3058153:SmartSide&CAWELAID=&kpid=3058153&CAGPSPN=pla&store_code=552&k_clickID=acfed035-86a0-4a62-b2aa-9febfb27f5cf&gclid=EAIaIQobChMI3tjSnOXi3AIVkcDACh3CbwpxEAQYASABEgKH2PD_BwE
It's a little spendy but if you can find it on sale, it's not too bad. I think it will look a lot better than plain OSB. I like that it has ship lap edges so it's totally seamless
True.
any way you look at it, drywall is cheaper than OSB
I have a hard time believing someone would feel a material that is more combustible, expensive, louder, harder to finish, harder to repair, etc. would be "best" given the alternatives.
Houses burn down everyday across North America and they have drywall installed rather than OSB for wall covering. If a building is going to burn, it's going to burn, no matter what you do.
