Id say maybe the wood has settled or bowed due to the humidity over the summer, and the bricks havent shifted because, well, its brick. Im not masonry expert, nor am I a carpenter, so I can only speculate.evildky said:how old is this wall? sometimes the wood just kind of dies out and warps, nothing to really worry about might be like that all the way around your house but your not gonna pull off the drywall and insulation to find out, it's also likely that they didn't use enough or large enough nails if the rough insulation is pulling off like that
realz said:There isn't any real strength in the brown sheathing that you are showing.
Because the 2x4 is only attached to the sheathing and nailed at the top and bottom, it could have bowed without any specific reason. The bowing could have made the sheathing pull away from the 2x4.
If you don't have any water coming in you should be OK.
Keep an eye on the location to see if there are additional changes.
Replace the 2x4 if it bothers you.
Iowa Carpenter.....
autoist said:Did you just notice it? or has it been there a long time?
I'm guessing that, if the foundation shows no sign of cracking, either something's pushing down on those 4 studs or they just all happened to warp...you could cut through them enough to allow them to straighten back up & then 'sister' new ones up against them & watch for a bit before doing the sheetrock...
...the bricks are only attached to the wall via the little metal bricj ties that are folded over inside a mortar joint so they might not show any change if there's nothing going wrong inside the wall other than wood bending
autoist said:Now I'm confused...are there more than 1 warped 2x4 side-by-side in a particular area?...are the 5 2x4's all together or spaced out all around the garage?
Matt Harwood said:Wood moves around. As it ages, it dries out (even kiln-dried lumber still has about 20% water in it) and it'll shift around. Usually there is a stressed skin nailed to the studs that keeps them from moving in any significant way, but the stuff you have seems to offer no structural strength. A lot of people don't realize that both the plywood/OSB skin of a house and the drywall inside add considerable strength to the structure by tying all the studs together rigidly. With the cardboard stuff you've got, there's no strength and nothing to keep the 2x4s from moving around.
After years in the construction trade, I can tell you this is most likely just the wood doing its thing and probably won't affect the structural integrity of the building. When you add drywall to the inside, it'll keep them from moving any more. With multiple nails/screws in it, you'd be surprised how much shear strength drywall has.
If you're concerned, however, just install some new 2x4s next to these, then cut these out. I don't think it's necessary unless the studs are so warped that they drywall won't lay flat. But I wouldn't worry about structural problems.
Hope this helps.
Matt Harwood said:After years in the construction trade, I can tell you this is most likely just the wood doing its thing and probably won't affect the structural integrity of the building. When you add drywall to the inside, it'll keep them from moving any more. With multiple nails/screws in it, you'd be surprised how much shear strength drywall has.
