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Level 0
Level 0 is used in temporary construction or if final decoration is undetermined. No taping or finishing is required. Dust walls constructed in mall storefronts are an example of walls finished at level 0. There are no changes in Level 0.
Level 1
A Level 1 finish is recommended in areas that would generally be concealed from view or in areas that are not open to public traffic. In Level 1, "set" has replaced "embedded" so that the first sentence now reads, "All joints and interior angles shall have tape set in joint compound." This was changed to clarify that tape need not be covered with joint compound to fulfill the requirements of Level 1. In Level 1, the surface is left free of excess joint compound. Ridges and tool marks are acceptable for a Level 1 finish. This level is often specified in the plenum area above ceilings, in attics, or in service corridors.
Level 2
In garages, warehouse storage areas and other similar areas where the final surface appearance is not of concern, a Level 2 finish is the recommendation. Level 2 may be specified where moisture resistant gypsum board is used as a tile substrate. Level 2 now reads, "All joints and interior angles shall have tape embedded in joint compound and wiped with a joint knife leaving a thin coating of joint compound over all joints and interior angles". This change is to further differentiate Level 2 from Level 1. Joint compound is applied over all fastener heads and beads. The surface is left free of excess joint compound. Ridges and tool marks are acceptable for a Level 2 finish.
Additionally, Level 2 now includes the following sentence: "Joint compound applied over the body of the tape at the time of tape embedment shall be considered a separate coat of joint compound and shall satisfy the conditions of this level." This sentence also appears in the ASTM C840 Appendix. In the past there has been some confusion as to whether tape pressed into joint compound and covered with joint compound in a single operation fulfilled the requirements of Level 1 or Level 2. This statement is intended to clarify the requirements of Level 2.
Level 3
In areas to be decorated with a medium or heavy texture or where heavy-grade wall coverings will become the final decoration, a Level 3 finish is recommended. Level 3 now states, "All joints and interior angles have tape embedded in joint compound and one additional coat of joint compound applied over all joints and interior angles. Fastener heads and accessories shall be covered with two separate coats of joint compound. All joint compound shall be smooth and free from tool marks and ridges." Before final decoration it is recommended that the prepared surface be coated with a drywall primer prior to the application of final finishes. Level 3 is not recommended where smooth painted surfaces or light- to medium-weight wall coverings become the final decoration.
Level 4
If the final decoration is to be a flat paint, light texture or lightweight wall covering, a Level 4 finish is recommended. Level 4 has been modified to read, "All joints and interior angles have tape embedded in joint compound and two separate coats of joint compound applied over all flat joints and one separate coat of joint compound applied over interior angles. Fastener heads and accessories shall be covered with three separate coats of joint compound. All joint compound shall be smooth and free from tool marks and ridges." Before final decoration it is recommended that the prepared surface be coated with a drywall primer prior to the application of final finishes. Gloss, semi-gloss and enamel paints are not recommended over a Level 4 finish.
Level 5
Level 5 finish is recommended for areas where severe lighting conditions exist and areas that are to receive gloss, semi-gloss, enamel or non-textured flat paints. Level 5 requires all the operations in Level 4. Additionally, a thin skim coat of joint compound, or material manufactured especially for this purpose, is applied to the entire surface. (This definition is referenced to Terminology, Section II, Page 2 of GA-214 to make the description of "skim coat" clear to all.) The surface is smooth and free from tool marks and ridges. Before final decoration it's recommended that the prepared surface be coated with a primer prior to the application of final finishes. The Level 5 finish is required to achieve the highest degree of quality by providing a uniform surface and minimizing the possibility of joint photographing and/or fasteners "burning through" the final decoration.
It is important to consider that each level of finish as described in the recommendation is intended to stand alone. The levels are not intended to be cumulative. In other words, you do not add levels together to achieve the next higher level of finish.
Careful attention should be given to the "'Note" following Levels 3, 4, and 5: "It is recommended that the prepared surface be coated with a "drywall primer" prior to the application of final paint. See painting specification in this regard." This is an important step that should not be forgotten before final decoration. "Drywall primer" replaced the term "primer/sealer" throughout the revised document. The application of high quality, high solids drywall primer minimizes most decorating problems.
As defined in the recommendation, a drywall primer is a paint material specifically formulated to fill the pores and equalize the suction difference between gypsum board surface paper and the compound used on finished joints, angles, fastener heads and accessories, and over skim coatings.
Resource: "Recommended Levels of Gypsum Board Finish" GA-214-96.
Tips to minimize decorating problems that can occur due to surface variations between the gypsum panel surface and areas finished with joint compound:
surface smoothness: Because the joints and fasteners must be concealed with fill and finish coats of joint compound, it is impossible to achieve a finished surface that is a flat plane. Instead, the joints and fasteners are finished with graduated arcs designed to prevent recesses or ridges that result in distinct shadows in critical light. When subjected to critical lighting, a Level 5 gypsum board finish as defined in GA-214-07 is recommended. When combined with the Level 5 paint finish, a Level 5 Gypsum board finish is the most effective method to minimize joint and fastener photographing and provides the most uniform final finish. Refer to Drywall Finishing Council document titled, "Recommended Levels of Paint Finish Over Gypsum Board".
http://dwfc.org/media/publications/pdf/2007/09/13/DWFC_Levels_of_paint_finish_-_FINAL_2007_09_12.pdf
(All appropriately prepared gypsum board surfaces shall have one coat of drywall primer applied to yield a properly painted surface. Two separate coats of topcoat material shall be applied over the drywall primer to yield a properly painted surface. Paint shall be applied to the mil film thickness and application conditions specified by the paint manufacturer. )
*Critical lighting (adj): A condition whereby interior surfaces are flooded by natural or artificial lighting at an oblique angle; such as lighting from large expanses of windows, glass curtain walls, skylights, or surface-mounted light fixtures.environmental control:
Temperature, humidity, and airflow should remain constant, and as close to occupancy conditions as possible The potential for finishing and decorating problems is minimal when job environmental conditions match occupancy environmental conditions. Controlling and maintaining environmental conditions is key. Changes in temperature, humidity, and airflow can have a profound adverse effect.
Resource: http://dwfc.org/media/publications/pdf/2007/01/06/level_five_finish.pdf
WOOD SHRINKAGE
Wood and water
In the living tree, wood is saturated with water. Some of it fills the cavities of wood's hollow, straw-like cells; some of it swells the cells' walls. To increase its stiffness, strength, dimensional stability, and usefulness as a construction material, the water must be removed. During air- and kiln-drying of green lumber, water evaporates first from cell cavities. But even when all the water in all the cavities is gone, the lumber still hasn't shrunk. Only once water starts to leave the swollen cell walls will wood's dimensions diminish. For almost all kinds of wood, the moisture content (MC) marking the onset of shrinkage and the lumber's greatest dimensions -the fiber saturation point- is about 30%. As moisture content falls below 30%, wood shrinks by about 1/30 of its total potential shrinkage for each one percentage point change in moisture content. The converse is true when dry wood picks up water and swells. Minimum dimensions are reached when wood is ovendry, or at 0% MC. Typically, the in-service moisture content of wood in heated buildings can range from about 4% to 16% annually.
Because wood's straw-like cells are laid down in concentric circles (the growth rings), with their length parallel to the trunk of the tree, green lumber shrinks by different percentages in length, width, and thickness during drying. With the exception of some kinds of abnormal wood, shortening along the grain, or longitudinal shrinkage, is so small (about 0.1% from green to ovendry, expressed as a percentage of the green dimension) that it usually can be ignored. But shrinkage across the grain, whether around the growth rings (tangential shrinkage) or across them (radial shrinkage), is substantial, and has to be accounted for in the design of just about anything made from wood. Though shrinkage values vary widely among woods, tangential shrinkage averages about 8%; radial shrinkage, about 4%.
Unequal shrinkage and swelling in the longitudinal, tangential, and radial directions gives rise to the bowing, crooking, twisting, cupping, and other forms of warpage commonly seen in lumber. It's also responsible for the wide checks and splits that open in large timbers used in post-and-beam construction. By cutting a saw kerf along the grain on a green timber's hidden face, you can encourage the widest check to open out-of-sight.
Shrinkage, not settlement
Contrary to popular phraseology, wood-frame buildings don't settle, they shrink. The year-round average equilibrium moisture content of studs, joists, and rafters in heated buildings is about 10%. But since framing lumber is exposed to outdoor relative humidity, and possibly precipitation too, during shipment, storage, and construction, it's usually sold at a moisture content of 15% to 19%, so some shrinkage and warpage is inevitable.
Beginning once the structure is weather-tight, most shrinkage takes place during the first heating season. A two-story, platform-framed home built with HEM-FIR lumber at 19% MC, for example, will shrink about 3/4 of an inch in height as it dries to 10% MC. Virtually all the shortening is due to across-the-grain shrinkage through the depth of the rim joists and the thickness of the wall plates. And that can lead to a multitude of headaches for builders.
For starters, joist and plate shrinkage can cause buckling of plywood siding panels outside or of drywall inside, especially in stairwells and spaces with cathedral ceilings. The problem arises when a panel crosses the rim joist between floors so that it's fastened to the studs above and below the joist. Vertical shrinkage of studs is virtually nil, but vertical shrinkage of joists and plates can be substantial. As the joist and plates shrink, studs on the two floors are drawn together, compressing the panel fastened to them. Being stiffer, plywood siding buckles, while drywall may buckle or crush. The solution is to break panels between floors. For drywall this may mean using an expansion joint at the joist and a control joint at the ceiling, or applying the drywall to resilient channels. For plywood siding, it means providing a flashed gap of about 1/4 in. at panel ends.
The initial shrinkage of framing can also lead to roof leaks when chimney flashing is rigidly -and thus incorrectly- connected to both the masonry and the wood frame. I've read one case history in which casement windows on the top floor of a three-story apartment building clad in brick wouldn't open after the first heating season because the platform-framed floors shrank below the openings in the masonry veneer.
Framing members that bulge out of the plane of a wall, floor, or ceiling as they dry often contain abnormal wood that shrinks excessively along the grain (ten or more times as much as normal wood), causing lumber to crook or kink. One kind, juvenile wood, forms around the center of trees for up to the first twenty years of growth, so just about all lumber sawn near the pith of a tree contains it. Another type, compression wood, forms on the bottom of branches and on the underside of leaning softwood trees. Lumber with lots of knots is apt to kink as it dries because of this. Cut excessively knotty or pith-containing lumber into cripples, blocking, and other short-length uses when you can.
Diagnosing diagonal cracks
Diagonal cracks occasionally appear in drywall at the corners over windows and interior doors. In some cases, overfastening is to blame; in others, the floor framing is at fault. If drywall is fastened to both header and studs around an opening, the header will pull down on the drywall as it shrinks. Fasteners in the studs resist the downward pull, placing the panel in tension, and presto! -the familiar diagonal crack. The remedy: around openings, fasten drywall to studs only.
Floor deck plans commonly call for 2x10 joists to bear on a central girder nail-laminated from 2x10s, and supported by metal columns. From a shrinkage perspective, the design is flawed. While the girder end of each joist bears on a beam 9 1/4 in. thick, the foundation end rests on a sill only 1 1/2 in. thick. The deck, though level when built, will slope towards the center after the framing shrinks because of the unequal depths of wood under opposite ends of the joists. Diagonal drywall cracks, racked interior door frames, and in severe cases, separation of interior partitions from floors, are possible results.
You can steer clear of these problems by mounting joists on the face of the girder with metal hangers, or by seating them on a ledger attached to a deeper girder. This way the entire deck area will be lowered uniformly as joists shrink. Using a steel carrying beam will also do the trick. But beware, there's one trap you can fall into when face-mounting joists to glulam, laminated veneer lumber, or other engineered structural wood beams. These products are typically somewhat drier (around 12 to 15% MC) than framing lumber when sold. If you install joists with their top edges flush with the top of an engineered beam, it's likely they'll shrink below the top of the beam, creating a ridge in the floor. By mounting joists slightly higher than the top of the beam, they're more likely to end up flush with its surface after shrinking. It's a good idea to do this even when built-up girders are used. One drawback is that face-mounted joists may make utility subs' jobs harder.
Stopping the popping
The familiar fastener pop is probably the most common drywall problem that crops up when studs and joists shrink. When first fastened, drywall is driven tightly against framing. But as the wood between the fastener tip, whose position is fixed, and the edge of the framing shrinks, it pulls away from the back of the panel, leaving a small gap between framing and panel. Pressure later applied to the panel face closes the gap, forcing the fastener head to lift the taping compound. Pops are fewer and less pronounced with screws versus nails. First, for the same holding power, screws are shorter than nails, so there is less wood between the screw tip and framing face to shrink. And secondly, it takes higher pressure to force drywall along a threaded shank than it does to slide it along a smooth one.
Pops frequently appear in ceilings near the perimeter because shrinking top plates force ceiling drywall down onto the upper edge of wall panels. Prevent these pops by not using fasteners in ceiling drywall within 16 inches of walls. Pops that appear when outlet and switch plate covers are screwed down, or when interior trim is applied, may be the result of overfastening or misplaced fasteners. You can reduce the potential for pops considerably by screwing and gluing drywall. The Gypsum Association, for example, extends its screw-only on-center spacing for walls from 16 in. to 24 in. when panels are screwed and glued.
Stop the pop that telegraphs through vinyl sheet flooring by using screws or ring shank nails long enough to fully penetrate the subfloor below underlayment, and by slightly recessing their heads as is done with drywall.
Annoying floor squeaks result when subflooring and stair treads rub against the shanks of fasteners popped from joists and stringers. Happily, prevention is easy. Just lay down a bead of gap-filling construction adhesive before installing subflooring and stair treads, and the culprit gap will never form. Using ring shank or coated nails seems to help too. Framing floors with drier, engineered wood joists, which shrink minimally after installation, is also a good solution.
Understanding withdrawal
Nail pops occur inside buildings because of the initial shrinkage of the framing. But cyclical shrinkage, swelling, and warping of exterior siding, trim, and deckboards can cause nails to be partially or completely withdrawn from framing. The holding power of nails driven into green wood that stays wet, or seasoned wood that stays dry, is essentially unchanged over time. But the withdrawal resistance of nails sunk into green wood that dries in place, or seasoned wood repeatedly wetted and dried, drops substantially over time. As exterior wood swells in thickness, it pulls on nails in direct withdrawal. The pulling action is amplified in flatsawn lumber whose edges lift as it cups.
Take the sight of nail heads protruding from water-borne preservative-treated deckboards. Saturated during treatment and sold essentially green, deckboards always shrink in thickness after installation, so nails flush with the surface when driven will later protrude. And regardless of whether they're laid "bark side up" or not, flatsawn deckboards almost always cup up as the sun dries their exposed tops faster and to a lower moisture content than their shaded bottoms. Cupping reverses itself when tops are wetted by rain. Repeated reversals can slowly pry nails from framing. I recently investigated a case in which cyclic cupping of flatsawn bevel siding caused nails to be withdrawn completely. Lack of backpriming, smooth nails that were too short, and butt joints that didn't fall over framing contributed to this callback.
Reduce the potential for nail withdrawal in exterior wood by using nails of proper size, ring shank nails, or where appropriate, screws. Apply a paint, stain, or water repellent as soon as possible to reduce cyclic dimensional changes. Choose quartersawn (vertical grain) rather than flatsawn, and narrow rather than wide, siding patterns when possible. Always backprime siding, and use fasteners that penetrate solid wood (sheathing and framing) at least 1 1/2 in. Minimize moisture content and dimensional changes after installation by buying siding, trim, and treated lumber ahead of time and letting it acclimate to site conditions elevated off the ground under a loosely draped tarp. Or consider using the newly available engineered wood fiber- and flake-based siding and trim products, which are touted as being more dimensionally stable and resistant to warping.
New techniques, new trouble
While solving old problems, new technology inevitably brings with it new ones. Such is the case with the two-decade-old truss-rising phenomenon that can cause cracks to open at wall/ceiling junctions during the heating season under roofs framed with metal plate connected wood trusses. An aesthetic problem only, truss-rising is usually associated with long span trusses (>26 ft.) of low slope (<6/12), and attic insulation more than 8 in. deep. Exposed to essentially the same air temperature and relative humidity, top and bottom truss chords have about the same moisture content for most of the year. But during the heating season the moisture content of the bottom chord, smothered in insulation and surrounded by warmer air at lower relative humidity, will drop. Meanwhile, the moisture content of the top chords, enveloped in much, much colder air at higher relative humidity, may increase. As a result, the bottom chord shortens slightly, while the top chords may grow a bit longer. Lengthening of the top chords forces the roof peak higher, while webs connecting top and bottom chords lift the bottom chord and ceiling drywall attached to it. Gaps close once the heating season ends as top and bottom chord moisture contents again equalize.
Though truss-rising can't be stopped, you can mask truss movement several ways. One option is to create a floating corner by holding back fasteners in ceiling drywall about 16 inches from partitions. Then use a drywall clip fastened only to the partition to make the ceiling/wall corner. Or, omit the clip, and hide the gap by fastening corner molding to the ceiling only. Another solution calls for 2x6 blocking to be fastened to the top of partitions, with no connection to the truss. Drywall edges are fastened to the blocking, but fasteners in the field are held back 16 inches from the edge, permitting drywall to flex between the edge and field fasteners as trusses rise. Yet another option is to make partition/truss connections using L-shaped brackets attached to the bottom chord with one fastener that slides in a slot as trusses arch upward. Here too, fasteners are held back 16 inches from partitions. Never rigidly attach trusses to partitions; this could induce bending forces trusses weren't designed to carry, or cause partitions to be lifted off the floor.
When panels bow
Buckling of plywood, oriented strandboard (OSB), and waferboard sheathing and subflooring panels almost always owes to edges being tightly -and thus improperly- butted during installation. Though considerably more dimensionally stable than solid lumber, wood-based panels are typically much drier (8 to 12% MC) when sold, and should be expected to increase in dimensions when exposed to outdoor relative humidity during construction. Because panels whose edges are tightly butted can't expand laterally, they accommodate expansion by buckling outward. That's why it's important to space panels according to the recommendation stamped on each sheet, usually 1/8 inch at ends and edges. The H-clips used between panels in roofs framed 24 in. o. c. space panels just about right. Builders have rightfully complained that when 48 x 96-inch panels are spaced as recommended, their ends don't fall on the framing after five or so sheets have been laid end to end. APA The Engineered Wood Association listened; its members now produce "Sized For Spacing" panels 47 7/8 x 95 7/8 inches that always line up with framing.
But even when properly spaced, panels soaked by rain during construction, or moistened by high relative or condensation in completed attics and crawl spaces can also buckle. Buckling occurs more readily with thinner panels and longer spans, and when fasteners miss framing. It even can be built in by applying panels to warped framing. And because it adsorbs water more readily, plywood made from southern yellow pine buckles much faster than that made from Douglas-fir.
What you should do about buckling depends on its cause. With tightly butted panels, create an expansion slot between panels by sawing a kerf along the unspaced edges. Swept free of ponded water, rain-buckled subflooring will usually flatten as it dries. Extra blocking below, and a few additional fasteners may be needed to coax it flat. Some panel makers notch the tongue in their T&G subflooring panels to encourage rain to drain. Buckling of roof sheathing before shingles are applied is usually due to rain. Buckling after roofing is in place often signals an interior moisture source and inadequate attic ventilation.
The best defense against buckling is proper spacing of panels, but using glues, screws, and ring shank or coated nails also helps. Buy panels ahead of time, and let them acclimate to site conditions elevated off the ground under a loosely draped tarp.
Edge swelling can also occur, especially in OSB and waferboard, because end grain and voids exposed on these panels' edges adsorb water much faster than their faces. Edges that swell after installation may telegraph through roof shingles or vinyl sheet flooring, making permanently visible a faint outline of the panel. Water-based flooring adhesives applied to underlayment can produce the same effect, but in this case, the shadow usually disappears as the water disperses throughout the panel. Most OSB and waferboard makers now seal the edges of panels with brightly colored, low-permeability coatings to minimize moisture gain during storage, shipment, and construction.
Coping with seasonal change
The source of a home's beauty and a finish carpenter's pride, few things enrich an interior more than skillfully-executed trim, stairs, and floors. But the typical wide seasonal swings in indoor relative humidity can cause perfectly-mated joints to yawn, and cracks to gape in wood strip floors. During the dead of winter indoor relative humidity may drop below 30%, while with windows open in summer it may rise to the outdoor level of 70% to 80%. The result is that the moisture content of wood indoors, which averages about 8% year-round, may drop to as low as 4% during the heating season, and climb to as high as 16% during the cooling season.
Rough lumber for millwork and flooring is initially kiln-dried to 6 to 9% MC, but there's no guarantee that it's going to stay there during shipment and storage prior to sale. That's why it's critical that doors, trim, stair parts, and flooring be acclimated on-site for a few days with indoor temperature and relative humidity maintained near occupancy levels before becoming part of the building.
On-site conditioning can minimize wood's seasonal movement, but it can't stop it. Take the case of a mitered corner joint in profiled molding, which is tightly closed most of the year. As the width of the trim changes in response to seasonal relative humidity, the joint's outside corner opens in summer, while its inside corner opens in winter.
Aware that wood movement couldn't be stopped, our woodworking forefathers allowed it to happen harmlessly through judicious design. Framed panel construction, in which a wide, bevel-edged wood panel floats in an oversized groove inside a wood frame, is a classic technique still used today for doors, cabinets, and wall panels. Pinned to the frame only at mid-width, the panel is free to expand and contract without unduly pushing or pulling on the frame or itself. Solid wood countertops, like the 36-inch wide sugar maple slab capping the peninsula in my kitchen, should have the same freedom to move. L-clips screwed to the bottom of the counter, but free to slide in the grooved frame of the supporting cabinet, not only allow it to change in width, but hold it flat as well.
I know of no better advice about wood flooring than that given long ago by an anonymous author at the USDA Forest Products Laboratory: "The cure for cracks in a floor lies wholly in preventing them." Except when indoor relative humidity is mechanically controlled, narrow cracks (1/32 to 1/16 inch with 2 1/4 inch-wide flatsawn oak) should be expected to open between some courses in wood strip floors during the heating season. But wider-than-expected cracks can develop when flooring is allowed to adsorb excess moisture before or after being laid. Flooring acclimated on-site before concrete, masonry, drywall, or plaster is thoroughly dry, or before the heating plant is operating, will likely pick up moisture and swell. Edges butted at installation will shrink apart as flooring moisture content drops during the first few months of occupancy. By the middle of the first heating season, cracks become chasms.
Even if at the proper moisture content when laid, flooring that picks up excess moisture before or after finishing in a meagerly heated, unoccupied home, can later develop wide cracks due to a phenomenon known as compression set. As moisture is adsorbed, tightly butted edges prevent strips from widening, so no apparent swelling takes place. In reality, swelling is accommodated by partial crushing of the strips' edges. Though crushed, a compressed strip will still shrink by the same percentage as an uncompressed strip.
But because its swollen width is narrower than that of an uncompressed strip, its shrunken width will be narrower too, making cracks between compressed strips wider. Subsequent swelling pressure during later periods of high relative humidity can increase the amount of compression set and the width of cracks. Compression set explains why old wood floors that were mopped with water often have gaping cracks. It's also why wooden tool handles continue to loosen after soaking them in water to tighten them. The tightening is temporary; subsequent drying produces even greater looseness. The solution is to keep flooring (and tool handles) dry so compression set can't develop.
Though it can't be eliminated, wood movement can be minimized, masked, and otherwise managed through attention to detail during design, installation, and finishing.
Stephen Smulski, Ph.D., is President of Wood Science Specialists Inc., a consulting firm in Shutesbury, Massachusetts that specializes in solving performance problems with wood products in all types of wood-frame construction.
By Tim Carter
©1993-2008 Tim Carter
Summary: Nail pops in drywall are caused by rough framing lumber shrinkage. Lumber shrinkage cannot be prevented - it is natural. However, you can reduce nail pops by installing the screws and drywall correctly.
Related Articles: drywall installation, drywall book, finishing tips
DEAR TIM: My builder has advised me to delay the installation of the drywall in my new home for as long as possible. He says that I will get a better finishing job with fewer defects. He also says that fewer 'nail pops' will develop. I think that he is trying to stall because his drywall contractor is stuck on another job. Is he telling me the truth? J. V.
DEAR J. V.: It is quite possible that both of you are right. As long as the delay is not substantial, you will benefit from the delay. Your builder is telling the truth with respect to overall quality of the finish job. He appears to be well informed on the subject of drywall installation.
A primary cause of many drywall related call back repairs is rough framing lumber shrinkage. Framing lumber used in new construction often shrinks after it is installed. Kiln dried lumber often has a moisture content that ranges between 15 - 20 percent. The moisture content can drop to 10 percent after installation. This loss of moisture is the result of normal drying and accelerated drying which occurs if your house requires heating during winter months. Lumber moisture content can be checked with a moisture meter.
This shrinkage is not uniform. Lumber experiences very little shrinkage along its length. It experiences moderate shrinkage in a direction perpendicular to the growth rings. This dimension in most framing lumber is generally referred to as its thickness. The shrinkage is most pronounced along the direction of the growth rings or the board's width. For example, a 2x4 wall stud will experience its greatest shrinkage along the 4 inch face.
Because lumber, at this point in time, is the most common framing member used in residential construction, you should be concerned with shrinkage. If your framing lumber has not dried out, or was subject to excessive amounts of rainfall prior to the installation of your roof, you very possibly could experience many drywall failures. The most common being "nail pops."
Nail pops can occur for a variety of reasons. One common cause of nail pops is 'operator error'. The installer fails to push the drywall firmly against the framing lumber as it is being fastened. This failure results in a void space between the back of the drywall and the framing lumber. If someone or something pushes against the drywall, the drywall goes in and the nail pushes to the surface.
However, lumber shrinkage can create the same identical effect, even if the drywall was properly installed. Because shrinkage causes the greatest dimensional change along the lumber's width, a void area can develop between the drywall and framing members.
Lumber shrinkage can not be avoided. In fact, just as your builder recommends, you should plan for it to occur. Try to plan your construction so that the rough framing occurs during the driest time of the year. Do whatever is necessary to get the structure 'under roof' as quickly as possible. After the house is under roof, try to keep the structure as open as possible. Keep doors and windows open during dry weather. Randomly sample the moisture content of your framing lumber. Avoid installing the drywall if you get consistently high moisture level readings. The wait will be worth it in the long run.
Besides, you really don't want the drywall contractor patching, sanding, and tracking dust through your house 9 months after you have moved in, do you?
Source: http://www.askthebuilder.com/019_Drywal_Nail_Pops_-_Common_Causes.shtml
Temperature
Drywall and gypsum finishing products should be installed when the temperature is 55 degrees F or higher. Many materials contract or expand with temperature changes. Drywall is one of them. Drywall installed at 28 degrees F will expand 1/2 inch over 100 feet when the temperature raises to 72 degrees F.
Drywall finishing materials perform poorly in temperatures below 55 degrees. If allowed to freeze before they completely dry, the finish compounds can lose their strength and possibly lose their bonding qualities as well.
Humidity
Humidity can also cause expansion and contraction problems in drywall. Drywall can expand 1/2 inch per 100 feet when the relative humidity goes from 13 percent to 90 percent. This expansion can cause the boards to become wavy due to the expansion. Excessive humidity can also cause ceiling drywall to sag between framing members. In the event this happens, it cannot be corrected. The force of gravity pulls the drywall down and it will retain this bowed shape.
Source: http://www.askthebuilder.com/B19_Drywall_Installation.shtml
The term "STC" generally refers to the "Sound Transmission Class" of a particular building material, wall or partition. The standardized test methods most commonly used to classify the sound transmission properties of a barrier are ASTM E 90 and ASTM E 413. The higher the STC rating, the more effective the barrier is at reducing the transmission of most common sound frequencies.
STC ratings for wall components are not additive. The total STC rating of a wall consisting of, for example, insulation, drywall, wood studs, plywood or OSB, etc., will not necessarily be the sum of the various component STC ratings. Therefore, the entire wall assembly, as installed, should be tested in order to determine its true Sound Transmission Class. For example, a ½” monolithic coating of spray applied polyurethane foam, in addition to contributing the STC properties as described above, will also help to deaden sound caused by vibration by adhering to, and bonding together the sheathing and studs. Also, small cracks or gaps in the wall structure (known as "flanking paths") will allow sound to transmit more freely, and lead to a lower overall STC rating. For this reason it is critical that all potential flanking paths be eliminated or reduced. The term "STC" is also sometimes used to describe the "sound transmission coefficient", which is a mathematical ratio dependent on the specific frequency of sound. It is used to determine the Transmission Loss, and ultimately, the Sound Transmission Class. The relationship between the sound transmission coefficient (t) and the Transmission Loss (TL) is; TL = 10 log (1/ t )
The "Noise Reduction Coefficient" (NRC) is a measure of how much sound is absorbed by a particular material, and is derived from the measured Sound Absorption Coefficients. The test methods most commonly used to determine sound absorption are ASTM C423 and ISO 354. Listed below are the Noise Reduction Coefficients for a typical 2 lb/ft3 polyurethane foam measured at different thicknesses;
Thickness measured | Noise Reduction Coefficient (NRC) |
1/4" | .20 |
3/8" | .30 |
1/2" | .40 |
3/4" | .50 |
1" | .50 |
These NRC can be viewed as a percentage of the sound waves which come in contact with the wall that are not reflected back within the room (example: .50 = 50%).
This information is provided as a service, and is not necessarily meant to reflect any recommendation, guideline or position of DSGK Drywal, LLC. Each individual customer must determine product suitability for any particular purpose.
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Clark, NJ 07066
ph: 732.340.9145
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