I'm continuing work in my garage. I had a new concrete floor poured and later Floorguard coated my concrete. Prior to finding this website for research, my concrete contractor did not put a vapor barrier down, but so far so good, no problems.
I ran conduit adding more outlets and lights and now I want to finish the garage with drywall.
I think I found a problem. My ceiling joists 2X6 16" on center with a 23' span. While crawling around up there I noticed that the joists did flex a lot. A little research on joist spans revealed my joists are quite weak for that span. What do you all think is going to happen if I drywall the ceiling?
I'm sure quite a few people have garages similar to mine, not built exactly to be finished. What have you done? I was possibly thinking of hanging the drywall and then adding 2x1/4 lattice over the joints instead of trying to tape and mud them since the weak joists will probably cause them to crack.
I ran conduit adding more outlets and lights and now I want to finish the garage with drywall.
I think I found a problem. My ceiling joists 2X6 16" on center with a 23' span. While crawling around up there I noticed that the joists did flex a lot. A little research on joist spans revealed my joists are quite weak for that span. What do you all think is going to happen if I drywall the ceiling?
I'm sure quite a few people have garages similar to mine, not built exactly to be finished. What have you done? I was possibly thinking of hanging the drywall and then adding 2x1/4 lattice over the joints instead of trying to tape and mud them since the weak joists will probably cause them to crack.

My shop has rafters that hold the roof up and they are made of 2x4's. Not sure what you mean by joists - is that part of the rafters or in addition to? At any rate, if either roof rafters or joists below rafters were made of 2x6 on 16" centers I'd say that would be WAY strong!! I've NEVER seen anything but 2x4 rafters used on any building and I live in the snow zone in central Canada! I've had feet of snow on my shop and house and no problem. As per Fredartic, I decided to drywall, but not tape and finish and instead just caulked all the seams and screws (though I like Fred's idea of a wood/mdf cover) and painted it. It looks good and hell - it's a shop!
So, (not to hijack this thread!) but when would you use 2x6 or bigger in framing? When there's a second floor or different roof maybe? My entire structure was built with 2x4 stock, though sometimes they where doubled or more (corners, under windows). I hope they built it stong enough!
