I'm new to the site and joined because I'm in the midst of my first garage build after saving 15 years for one. I hired a contractor to build my 30x38 garage because I'm disabled with two badly herniated disc's. He was recommended by friends that had him build their garage. They used him after seeing their neighbours garage.
Being on disability, I'm on a tight budget. My cousin who owns a construction business gave me about 60 free sheets of used 3/8" OSB that was used for crating. I just had to knock off foam blocks that were glued to the sheets. Half were 4x8 and the other half were around 42"x8'. My contractor said it wouldn't be an issue to use them.
He just finished putting the walls up(2x6 studs 10'4.5" tall) and sheathing them. My concern is that their are gaps between the sheets. Some between sheets, some along the bottom sill, some between the sheathing and studs.
Most are small gaps like a 1/16". But he used the 4x8 sheets vertically and then cut the smaller sheets for the remaining 2' 4.5"'s. His cuts were wavy and so their are gaps going pretty much all the way around the garage at the 8' height. Some I would say are 1/8" but you can see daylight pretty much around the whole perimeter. When I saw this I asked if it was an issue and should the gaps at least be chaulked to fill in the gap. He said not to worry about it and just Tyvek over it. The sheathing also is uneven where it ends at the top sill plate. In some areas there is an inch between where the sheathing ends and the top sill plate and other areas where it's less than half an inch.
He also put a sheet of osb up that was wider than the man door rough opening. He trimmed the excess osb with a circular saw without marking it and didn't cut straight so he cut into the bottom half of the door frame stud for about two feet on a curve. So now I have a cut in the stud the depth and width of the circular blade two feet long, that at the bottom goes about an inch into the center of the stud for the door opening.
Are these issues a big deal or am I just being paranoid. It was used osb so I can understand some gaps but is this within normal building practices? It's hard to get decent contractors where I live and I'm worried this one isn't doing good work.
Should I make him rip out the cut stud on the man door opening and replace it? Are the gaps considered normal? I'm up in northern Ontario, Canada so R value is important to me.
Thanks for any advice or insight.
Being on disability, I'm on a tight budget. My cousin who owns a construction business gave me about 60 free sheets of used 3/8" OSB that was used for crating. I just had to knock off foam blocks that were glued to the sheets. Half were 4x8 and the other half were around 42"x8'. My contractor said it wouldn't be an issue to use them.
He just finished putting the walls up(2x6 studs 10'4.5" tall) and sheathing them. My concern is that their are gaps between the sheets. Some between sheets, some along the bottom sill, some between the sheathing and studs.
Most are small gaps like a 1/16". But he used the 4x8 sheets vertically and then cut the smaller sheets for the remaining 2' 4.5"'s. His cuts were wavy and so their are gaps going pretty much all the way around the garage at the 8' height. Some I would say are 1/8" but you can see daylight pretty much around the whole perimeter. When I saw this I asked if it was an issue and should the gaps at least be chaulked to fill in the gap. He said not to worry about it and just Tyvek over it. The sheathing also is uneven where it ends at the top sill plate. In some areas there is an inch between where the sheathing ends and the top sill plate and other areas where it's less than half an inch.
He also put a sheet of osb up that was wider than the man door rough opening. He trimmed the excess osb with a circular saw without marking it and didn't cut straight so he cut into the bottom half of the door frame stud for about two feet on a curve. So now I have a cut in the stud the depth and width of the circular blade two feet long, that at the bottom goes about an inch into the center of the stud for the door opening.
Are these issues a big deal or am I just being paranoid. It was used osb so I can understand some gaps but is this within normal building practices? It's hard to get decent contractors where I live and I'm worried this one isn't doing good work.
Should I make him rip out the cut stud on the man door opening and replace it? Are the gaps considered normal? I'm up in northern Ontario, Canada so R value is important to me.
Thanks for any advice or insight.
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