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Thread: Next up Drywall

  1. #1

    Next up Drywall

    Spray Foam is done. Getting set to have drywall delivered. I'm hoping to have a functional shop again by the summer.



    DSC_0534.jpgDSC_0533.jpg

  2. #2
    You might be surprised how cheap it is to have someone come in and just do the drywall.

  3. #3
    I enclosed our deck a few years ago. Researched the cost of drywall, mud, renting a lift, etc. Figured it would take me a week or more and I'd have an acceptable job after working my tail off. Hired a drywaller for exactly the estimated cost of materials and rental and went on vacation. Came home to a great job ready for paint. I'd MUCH rather paint than mud.
    I've only had one...in dog beers.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Apr 2010
    Location
    Nashville, TN
    Posts
    1,544
    +1 for hiring drywall done. I did this with our basement finish and have never regretted spending the money. At the very least, hire a crew to hang it. They will have 3 or 4 guys and will probably have it all hung that day. My basement is about 800 sq.ft., with a bath, and ceiling soffits, 3 guys hung it all in about 3 hours. Took about a week before I was ready for paint.

    Mike

  5. #5
    I already own a drywall lift but you guys might be right.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Feb 2009
    Location
    Fort Collins, CO
    Posts
    946
    I looked into getting spray foam insulation about 10 years ago and it was pretty expensive. Of course I could only find one contractor in my area who would do it. How is it these days? Are you pretty happy with the product?

    That is going to be a sweet shop - loads of space and lots of headroom!
    Man advances just in proportion that he mingles thought with his labor. - Ingersoll

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Apr 2010
    Location
    Nashville, TN
    Posts
    1,544
    Quote Originally Posted by Adam Carl View Post
    I already own a drywall lift but you guys might be right.
    I have 9' ceilings in my basement. I asked the guys that hung the drywall about using a lift and they said it was too slow. Of course, there was three of them, and only one of me. I would need a lift or T-jack if I did it by myself. Looks like you may have some taller ceilings. The ones hanging my drywall were getting paid by the sheet from the sheetrock finisher. I gave the finisher a $500 advance payment to pay the hangers. Get a quote, they are more than happy to quote you a price and you want to supply your own drywall anyway to avoid the mark-up from the finisher. I had three quotes on mine, but didn't go with the cheapest based on referrals. Of course, this is a shop, so you may not be as particular, I wasn't in mine. If you don't need a glass smooth surface, let them know, and it should deduct from the price. I have a 14x20 basement shop and had the ceiling mudded and taped for about $200, no skim coat. The basement was about $1300 for finishing and $500 for hanging, did not include the drywall, but I had some prices lower than that.

    Depending on your area, you may find a crew that needs the work and will give you a good price. Personally, I hate doing drywall, so I plan on having it done most of the time. (Also hate laying carpet, I sub that out too.)

  8. #8
    Join Date
    May 2009
    Location
    Boston
    Posts
    1,740
    ++ on having a crew come in and do it. Those are some high ceilings and walls to cover. They usually charge by the sheet. We redid our house 10 years ago and it was 50 bucks a sheet (110 sheets) skim coated. The guy who hung the drywall did it all in 1 1/2 days and the plasterers were in and out in 1 day.

    Remember cash is king to these guys so a pile of Benjamins gets you a nice discount.

    It looks like a great shop.
    Don

  9. #9
    Join Date
    May 2008
    Location
    MA
    Posts
    2,260
    I buy drywall from a supplier that specializes in just this. If you ask, or if you look at the bulletin board, there are a number of guys posting looking for work (and by asking you get the ones that know what they are doing). Cant do it myself for what they charge (but still muck around with the smaller jobs myself)

  10. #10
    I'm a real drywall novice and ran into a few issues on my first couple of home projects:

    1. I couldn't get a cheapo drywall screw gun to work properly so I just use a regular driver and get a good feel and rhythm going.

    2. If a drywall seam is off and not even, it's easier to shim/redo the seam so it's flush than to use tape and mud for a fix later.

    3. Mudding perfect seams quickly is a skill that is developed through experience.

    Other than that, you might want to look into hanging all the drywall yourself, then hire a dry wall contractor to do the tape and mudding of your work. This can be a savings depending on your costs.

  11. #11

    Spray Foam

    Quote Originally Posted by Jon McElwain View Post
    I looked into getting spray foam insulation about 10 years ago and it was pretty expensive. Of course I could only find one contractor in my area who would do it. How is it these days? Are you pretty happy with the product?

    That is going to be a sweet shop - loads of space and lots of headroom!
    It is still expensive but I am planning on staying put for the next 20 years so it should work out in the long run. In the northeast it is cold in the winter and I really wanted a place to build stuff in the winter.

    Only had it for a couple weeks but so far I am really happy. It was 40 degrees today and I turned on the heat. It was a comfortable temp in no time.

    The thing that amazes me about the foam is the sound. Or lack of sound. The place is so quiet now.

  12. #12
    FYI, the ceiling height is 14 feet.

  13. #13
    When the drywallers see that high ceiling, forget cheap.

  14. #14
    Join Date
    Jul 2004
    Location
    Vernon, Connecticut
    Posts
    510
    Very nice Adam. I too got the spray foam and my pictures look very similar to yours. Mine was done a couple of years ago and I was able to easily manage CT winters with only a 5 KW heater keeping two floors at 60°. The quiet and insulation are worth the expense in my opinion.

    I understand where people are coming from with the drywall, but I did both floors myself because I'm cheap and I felt it was good therapy to stay active. My lift was a godsend and the only help I had was to carry sheets to the second floor. In addition, doing it myself allowed me to slow down the process to add alarm system wiring that I forgot to add at the beginning of the project.

    Bob

  15. #15
    Join Date
    May 2004
    Location
    columbia, sc
    Posts
    810
    did you guys use closed cell or open?
    Bob C

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