rob in nh
Well-known member
what thickness of sheetrock do you normally use for the walls and ceiling. thanks
It might be rated for ceilings as in it won't sag but, is it fire rated the same as 5/8's and approved for code in your county?The new tough rock and ultra light 1/2" is rated for ceilings, and it works good too. It's all I use anymore.
Around here, any house built uses 1/2" for everything. Walls and ceiling both. You won't have a wavy ceiling if you go across the rafters instead of with the rafters.
My home uses 1/2" for wall and ceiling and it was built in the 1970s. Why would I want to use heavier/thicker board on ceiling?
^Sag potential? I highly doubt that because you have to fight the weight.
Fire suppression: How significant for residential home?
5/8" is stiffer than 1/2" board.
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Here's a question for the drywall experts I'd like to know an answer on......If a house by code is supposed to have 5/8" drywall to help slow a fire, why is in not required to use FIREPROOF drywall instead of just going an 1/8" thicker and using a fire rated drywall?
To be honest, I never even heard of fireproof drywall until the other day.
What you're forgetting is the weight. Look at it this way, you don't engineer a bridge w/o considering its own weight as a mode for failure.
No, I'm not forgetting the additional weight. It is stiffer even with the additional weight. Better?
It's not like you're going over a subject that's never been considered before. It's been proven that 5/8 resists sagging better than 1/2" over a given span between joists.
