mikeytint
Well-known member
I am thinking about using soffit material for my ceiling. I was wondering if anyone else has used this and what it looks like.
My Asylum has basically a pole barn structure, and as such, has purlins running parallel to the ridge rafter supporting the roofing metal. In the picture that follows, the darker colored wood is the original 2x6" purlins spaced at 30' and the lighter wood is extra support I added for the vinyl and insulation between them.Shopnut was there any reason why you went with the rafters opposed to perpendicular to them? Did you have to add furring to the rafters to do it?

The minor difference in looks isn't worth the extra work - skip the strips. Now if your rafters are way out of wack, furring strips with shims might be worthwhile to straighten it outShopnut it definitely looks good that way. I have a regular stick built type garage and rather than do the extra furring i am going to run it length wise.

Here you go Mikey. These are "in progress" shots. I have since added lights, electrical and air lines, etc. I found it very easy to do and I'm happy with the results.
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Here you go Mikey. These are "in progress" shots. I have since added lights, electrical and air lines, etc. I found it very easy to do and I'm happy with the results.
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Eric - It doesn't show in these photos but in other parts of the garage I trimmed the soffit panels with 1"x6" MDF that is screwed to the wall. It is painted white to match the walls. I have air lines and electrical conduit clipped to the MDF trim. I wanted something that I could screw clips, brackets, etc. to and the usual j or f channel didn't seem necessary.I see you din't use any J-channel or F-channel, are you planning on some type of trim for the edges ?
Sid - It's actually aluminum and I got it at Home Depot. Each panel measures 16" W x 10' L and costs about $15. I didn't do a cost comparison between it and drywall. My guess is that this costs a bit more but it was well worth it. I like the look and I was able to install it by myself without gutting the garage to to it. There was also NO drywall dust, painting, etc. mess involved. These panels are extremely light. They are easy to handle by yourself and add next to no dead weight to the ceiling.Seeing you are not too far from me, where did you get your soffit material from and price? It's vinyl right?
Thanks!
Sid - It's actually aluminum and I got it at Home Depot. Each panel measures 16" W x 10' L and costs about $15. I didn't do a cost comparison between it and drywall. My guess is that this costs a bit more but it was well worth it. I like the look and I was able to install it by myself without gutting the garage to to it. There was also NO drywall dust, painting, etc. mess involved. These panels are extremely light. They are easy to handle by yourself and add next to no dead weight to the ceiling.
Stew
It is non-vented soffit. At both Home Depot and Lowe's (probably Rona too) they had both vented and non-vented soffit. I liked the product at Home Depot because, in cross section, the "groove" has a nice flat area that you can screw through. The ones at Lowe's had more of a "v" groove. BTW - there was NO drilling invloved. This stuff is thin enough that you can start the screws by simply pushing them in with your screw driver. They even sell white screws for this purpose. You can barely see them once everything is installed.Is it actually soffit? Everything I see at Rona or Home depot is vented.
Sid - It's actually aluminum and I got it at Home Depot. Each panel measures 16" W x 10' L and costs about $15.
(180 pieces) Guess thats not happening anytime soon.Eric - It doesn't show in these photos but in other parts of the garage I trimmed the soffit panels with 1"x6" MDF that is screwed to the wall. It is painted white to match the walls. I have air lines and electrical conduit clipped to the MDF trim. I wanted something that I could screw clips, brackets, etc. to and the usual j or f channel didn't seem necessary.
I'll try to post a photo later today to better explain this.Stew
