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Wall protection ?

427HISS

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 15, 2005
Messages
746
Any suggestions on a product to protect the lower portion of the drywall other than waynes coating ? Must look great too.

Me wife said Lexan but, I told her that it scratches easy.
 
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Spencyg

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Joined
Mar 25, 2009
Messages
40
I always have thought a 4' tall section of silver corregated roofing would look pretty cool at floor lever...maybe mount a narrow 4" shelf at the top of the corregations to seal the voids. I've thought that would look really cool.

Spence
 

Vinko

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Jul 7, 2008
Messages
5,829
Location
Los Angeles
I took some scrap diamond plate from a truck bed -- about 20" tall and 1/4" thick. Maybe it was 3/16's.

Cut it, straightened it, and had it powdercoated.

On corners I cut 3/8's 4" angle iron.

Overkill, but fun :)
 

stricht8

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Joined
Apr 20, 2008
Messages
1,714
Technically this qualifies as wainscoting, but I put 1x10 rough sawn pine boards oriented horizontally along the bottom portion of my walls. I leave it unpainted and untreated. It give a rustic barn kind of look.
 

AP2TUDE

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Aug 14, 2007
Messages
84
Location
Rockwall, TX
I always wanted to use rolled stainless, just tack it down and hit it with scotchbrite to make the surface pattern even.
 
OP
4

427HISS

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Joined
Aug 15, 2005
Messages
746
These are some great ideas. :)

AP2TUTD-"I always wanted to use rolled stainless, just tack it down and hit it with scotchbrite to make the surface pattern even".

Awesome. It would closely match my 427 cobra dash. That's a cool idea. I made a lot of custom pieces on the car out of stainless. Most recently new ss side pipes. That would sure pull the car and the finished garage pull together.

What do you think ?

(I don't know why when I post pics, that the Blondie is always sitting on my car)!!! lol
 

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Jack Olsen

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Mar 22, 2009
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Los Angeles
I guess a lot of how to solve this problem depends on use -- how much actual damage you expect to suffer and how important it is to you to be able to repair damage when it's done to the protective stuff. The smart thing about wainscoting (had to look up how to spell that) is that it's often made out of multiple pieces -- which makes me think replacing individual pieces without having to tear the whole thing out was part of the plan. A lot of time it's also hardwood, which is tougher than plaster, but the common use of tongue-and-groove vertical slats makes me think (again) of ease of replacement for a section versus the whole.

oak_wainscoting.jpg


The thing that bugs me about corrugated metal is that it dents easily and there's no simple way to repair those dents. But I suppose if you installed it vertically, with a cap piece that was removable, you could replace individual sections (what is that stuff, 3' wide?). It is pretty inexpensive, if I remember right.

It might be worth looking into inexpensive fencing materials, like pine slats, as a way you could have a protective layer that's also repairable in small sections. Is there any kind of cheap plastic slatting that could be re-purposed for this? Something 1"x.25", even if it was flexible like a Hot Wheels track, could be held in place with grooves above and below and maybe a little adhesive.

Old pallet lumber?

I'll bet someone with some time and a way to trim it out could even make OSB look good, if you paneled it like interior wainscoting.

Or I suppose you could just be really careful with your sheetrock garage walls.

But where's the fun in that?
 

twostory

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 23, 2005
Messages
554
Location
Duluth, Georgia
I do not have any interior wall in my garage yet, it is just studs.

But this thread discussion seems like overkill for most garage users.

I never damaged the dry wall in my last house. So just how bullet proof does the wall need to be?

Drywall is cheap, easily repaired and fire resistant. Dry wall is what I will finish my garage with eventually.

Now if you want a different look than painted drywall, go for it, but I would not worry if the wall was tough enough.
 

Spencyg

Active member
Joined
Mar 25, 2009
Messages
40
I never damaged the dry wall in my last house. So just how bullet proof does the wall need to be?


I had tons of holes in the drywall of my last shop. I do lots of machining and such, and it doesn't take much to have your drywall looking like ****. Not only that, but unless you have a real good paint on the walls oil and stains will ruin the paper face and soak into the gypsom making replacement mandatory....I now have gloss painted OSB throughout and love it.

Spence
 

rieferman

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Joined
May 18, 2009
Messages
2,586
Location
Collegeville PA (30 min west of Philly)
jack olsen wrote:
Old pallet lumber?

That's exactly what I'm doing. It turns out that not all pallets are created equal. Light, inexpensive products, that aren't travelling far are on **** pallets. On the other hand, heavy products, costly products, and items travelling far are on better wood.

My favorite source so far is the local beer distributor - very heavy product, travels far, therefore on good pallets (often times, hard woods. lots of oak.). Beer guy doesn't want him, so they're free. Crow bar or sawzall to pull the stringers free, and off you go. Plus the rest of the pallet makes good campfire supplement.
 
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