ratdoggy
Well-known member
I want to attach my metal framing to my concrete floor (it's in my basement-not my garage) Would construction adhesive be fine by itself or should I also use mechanical fasteners, powder nailer or concrete screws.
i used tapcons in my basement floorYou may want to research putting metal studs directly on concrete. Concrete will wick moisture and corrode them in no time flat.
If it were my wall I would put a Pressure Treated bottom plate then another non-treated 2x4 on top of that and then your metal stud channel.
I would glue and screw everything.
I guess most of the factories that use metal studs to build office space need to remove theirs now?
In commercial construction it is usually specified to have a bond breaker (tar paper or sim) between the bottom track and the concrete.
We also usually shoot the track to the floor (ramset, hilti, etc)
You may want to research putting metal studs directly on concrete. Concrete will wick moisture and corrode them in no time flat.
In commercial construction it is usually specified to have a bond breaker (tar paper or sim) between the bottom track and the concrete.
Any method works…adhesive, tapcon or ramset gun.
The only challenge I see with the adhesive is that you have to “glue” the bottom side of the plate before you build and square your wall. The adhesive might start to set before you can square and straighten the wall. I typically like to build the wall, either in place or as a tilt up, square and straighten it (including the intersecting walls that meet it) and then either ramset or tapcon it down as the last step (on all the walls). Also, the adhesive might tend to “mush” around a bit and make the bottom plate a bit more lose when you put in each vertical stud.
Not get too far off topic…
But when building long walls (>8’), instead of using offsetting 2 x 4 x 8s on the top and bottom plate, I’ll use 16’ long (even 20’s) composite decking board as the bottom and top plate. I’ll top that with standard 2 x 4 x 8s and then build the walls. I like this method because once the wall is built I can straighten, square and level the entire wall. The long composite board (both the sole and top) create one tight unit. I find the when multiple boards are used for the sole and top plates the wall can more difficult to square and straighten across long distances. You can find long (12’, 14’ and 16’) 2 x 4s but since they typically have a twist of some sort they make better propellers than wall framing. Long composites are straight as pin and won’t wick ground moisture. Combine that will quality studding in the middle and you’ll end up with a nice straight, level wall. The dry-wallers (if not you) will love you.
You may want to research putting metal studs directly on concrete. Concrete will wick moisture and corrode them in no time flat.
If it were my wall I would put a Pressure Treated bottom plate then another non-treated 2x4 on top of that and then your metal stud channel.
I would glue and screw everything.
+1 (Ever see water heater that rusted out from sitting directly on concrete?)I would at least put a strip of roofing paper beteen the plate and the slab and then fasten w/ Tapcons or Hilti gun. JMHO.
lol composite top and bottom plates. thats going to be a pretty expensive wall. i have never heard of this but it seems it would cost and take alot more time than its worth. just use a 3,4,5, triangle and snap some chalk lines and your good.
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I've seen a lot of walls go up in commercial buildings and around here they fasten the bottom steel channel using 3M VHB. No mechanical fasteners at all. And I can tell you, even on loading docks, those walls do not move. Oh, and for the guys worried about rust, there's your separation of steel and concrete.
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Thanks, Ratdoggy. This isn't a huge job, so the added cost of some roofing felt or a layer of sill gasket is really negligible. So if something like this is going to add a little bit of protection, then I'm all for it.
Any other good ideas would be appreciated.
I have plenty of roofing felt left over....
If you want some let me know how much you need and pay for shipping...
