Omnibuswoman Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago I have noticed that the bottom of the metal shoes holding the ends of the I joists are slightly below the level of the joists themselves. I'm shortly going to be plasterboarding the ceiling, and wondering how to overcome the difference in depth. Should I cross batten the whole ceiling to create a level surface, or shim the face of each joist with something of the same depth (around 4-5mm), or just not worry about it? I've noticed that if I screw PB into a surface with a raised point it makes stress noises - what I don't know is how much this matters....?
crispy_wafer Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago (edited) have you ran a straight edge across the i joists, are they perfectly flat? Mine weren't, out by a few mm here and there. So I ended up cross battening and packing to take out the undulations, this also removes hangers and nail heads from the equation. Edited 3 hours ago by crispy_wafer
Nickfromwales Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago If you don’t want to lose the extra inch, you could use resilient bars. If there’s a floor above you’ll kill two birds with one stone; levelling and avoiding the humps, and getting sound sound deadening. Defo not a good thing to try and screw PB to two different levels, with screws so close together. The screws will just keep breaking through and the plasterboard stands a chance of snapping too. Resilient bars will drop you about 15mm iirc.
Big Jimbo Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago I normally run 20mm cross battens. Spacing them to take the plasterboard sheets.
Oz07 Posted 54 minutes ago Posted 54 minutes ago What are you having tape and fill or skim? Skimmed boards can be fitted with a few more lumps and bumps than the former
Oz07 Posted 52 minutes ago Posted 52 minutes ago Those hangers don't look bad to me from the picture. I'd be inclined to board over. Sometimes a flat bit of timber and a whack with a hammer flattens it out.
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