Omnibuswoman Posted Thursday at 11:46 Posted Thursday at 11:46 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 Thursday at 12:46 Posted Thursday at 12:46 (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 Thursday at 12:46 by crispy_wafer
Nickfromwales Posted Thursday at 12:55 Posted Thursday at 12:55 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. 2
Big Jimbo Posted Thursday at 13:12 Posted Thursday at 13:12 I normally run 20mm cross battens. Spacing them to take the plasterboard sheets.
Oz07 Posted Thursday at 15:16 Posted Thursday at 15:16 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 Thursday at 15:18 Posted Thursday at 15:18 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.
torre Posted Thursday at 16:39 Posted Thursday at 16:39 Unless you need fire protection I'd be tempted to take a couple of mm off the back of the board where it would contact each hanger.
Omnibuswoman Posted Thursday at 19:01 Author Posted Thursday at 19:01 Thanks all for these replies. I will check how level the joists are to decide whether I need to batten or use resilient bars, and I will give bashing one of them a go to see whether I can reduce the difference enough to just PB straight onto them. 1
Mr Punter Posted Thursday at 19:21 Posted Thursday at 19:21 The res bars are good call. Easy to fit as well. 1
Eric Posted Thursday at 22:02 Posted Thursday at 22:02 I use the multitool to notch the plasterboard where the brackets/hangers are. 2
Nickfromwales Posted Thursday at 22:19 Posted Thursday at 22:19 17 minutes ago, Eric said: I use the multitool to notch the plasterboard where the brackets/hangers are. Legend.
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