Thanks for the suggestions guys. As for why I chose OSB, there are a couple of reasons. Number one is that this is a working garage. I restore classic cars as a hobby, and while I keep my garage organized, will be used strictly for body work, welding, painting, greasy mechanical work, etc. Not a parking or show garage at all.
I don't care about how the walls look, at least within reason. I do want to paint them a bright white for maximum light reflection. I will have a lift and I want light underneath the car that's up. I'm afraid that rough side is going to soak up paint like a sponge, and maybe even cause some delamination.
It is a detached garage, we already have an attached garage for parking. So I don't care about fire suppression as far as keeping it from the house. Another reason is cost. Not the drywall itself, but the quotes I got for taping and bedding put me over budget. The last reason is durability. I've been doing this car stuff for awhile and I've punched holes in every garage I've had.
I put the rough side out in my building. It was actually the nicer side!
There is no way I would put drywall in my shop! Way too delicate! IMO
Jeep, did you paint it? Do you have any pics?
the last garage i built that we osb the inside walls we sprayed a heavy layer of texture on top of it. then primed and painted. You have to look hard to tell that its not drywall.
amac, same question, any pics? Did you just spray the texture and go? No smoothing or sanding?
I have built a few garages. Prime and paint the rough side. Hang stuff on the walls and put toolboxes in there and you won't even notice.
Pull it and flip it around.
1/4" drywall. More cost and time, but you get a smooth wall.
Spray texture like someone mentioned above. Here is an example of that exact situation in the attached pic. Thick texture on the rough side. Can't even tell. Even the owner thought it was drywall. This is the only pic I have, but the rest of the garage looked great.
That looks good. Only problem is that I don't want to do all that work. I am finishing it myself and I just wanted to spray some paint and go.
I'm going to paint some samples today, rough side and smooth side and see if it's something I can live with. The contractor has offered to take it down and flip it, which is really generous. I was trying to come up with another option, as he has been really good and I feel a little guilty about him having to do that. I did not specify the smooth side out, I just assumed it would be obvious. And before you say it, I know what "assume" means.
