I am making a basement partition (2x4 framed, basement dry etc). I am going to sheath it with OSB sheets (1/2"). Basement edge/foundation walls are well sealed and have closed cell foam sheets covered by drywall (primed & painted). Edge wall sheathing and insulation is anchored by 1 1/2 furring strips (same thickness of foam panels under drywall) over a poured foundation with no leaks and a good french drain all around on the outside (no water infiltration). The basement is a pretty steady cool temp year round (mid Michigan) with light heating and humidity is low (particularly in the winter). So there has been no condensation issues. The drywall walls are finished smooth.
I want to paint the OSB sheets to match the perimeter/foundation wall. I will lightly sand them then prime and paint. It does not need to be super, but better if it does not look like ****.
Question: Are their special considerations to finishing/painting OSB. I figure I should heavily prime it (2 coats?) then paint two coats. Is that enough or do I need to use some product to seal the OSB chip grain better first? Also is there a preferred face (one with alignment lines or flip side) to paint that might adhere better? I plan on construction adhesive + staple the panels. I will likely use thin flat vertical molding strips on panel seams and have baseboard and top molding (matching drywall). That should avoid seam cracks.
I want to paint the OSB sheets to match the perimeter/foundation wall. I will lightly sand them then prime and paint. It does not need to be super, but better if it does not look like ****.
Question: Are their special considerations to finishing/painting OSB. I figure I should heavily prime it (2 coats?) then paint two coats. Is that enough or do I need to use some product to seal the OSB chip grain better first? Also is there a preferred face (one with alignment lines or flip side) to paint that might adhere better? I plan on construction adhesive + staple the panels. I will likely use thin flat vertical molding strips on panel seams and have baseboard and top molding (matching drywall). That should avoid seam cracks.




