Anyone out there build walls/hang drywall?
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Anyone out there build walls/hang drywall?
We will be getting a house next month if everything goes as planned. It has a living/dining area that we want to turn part of it into an office.
We need two walls built, 10' tall, one will be 12', the other 9' with a door in one.
Any idea how much a professional would charge?
Just asking because I know I would have a good chance of getting an honest ROUGH estimate from here
Mugzy
Here is the house:
http://www.photographic.org/photos/?a=45
We need two walls built, 10' tall, one will be 12', the other 9' with a door in one.
Any idea how much a professional would charge?
Just asking because I know I would have a good chance of getting an honest ROUGH estimate from here

Mugzy
Here is the house:
http://www.photographic.org/photos/?a=45
Nice house
Just don't let these guys do the work!
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=817&e=4&u=/ap/wrong_house
Just don't let these guys do the work!
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=817&e=4&u=/ap/wrong_house
FAT, DRUNK, AND STUPID......is no way to go through life-son!
Dean Wormer, Faber College 1962
Dean Wormer, Faber College 1962
- hightimber
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Re: Anyone out there build walls/hang drywall?
If you're even slightly handy with tools, I'd consider doing this yourself and use steel studs instead of lumber. Without ANY prior framing experience, my wife and I completely framed our basement using steel studs. They're much cheaper than lumber and ALWAYS straight. The walls that I built are more plumb than the ones built by the 'professionals' who constructed my house.Originally posted by Mugzy
We will be getting a house next month if everything goes as planned. It has a living/dining area that we want to turn part of it into an office.
We need two walls built, 10' tall, one will be 12', the other 9' with a door in one.
Any idea how much a professional would charge?
Just asking because I know I would have a good chance of getting an honest ROUGH estimate from here
Mugzy
Cutting the steel studs is very simple. Use Tinsnips and cut both sides of the steel channel. Then using a back-and-forth, swinging motion, snap off the steel stud.
They screw together so if you make a mistake, undoing you work is simple. Try that with lumber.
Steel-framed walls are more fire resistant and just as sturdy as lumber-framed walls.
The trickier part will be framing your doorway and getting a door hung. That takes a little patience and expertise but we even managed to do that 5 times in our basement (bi-fold and regular swinging doors). Be sure to make your doorway plenty big to allow yourself room to shim the doorframe to make sure it's square.
We did hire-out the taping and texturing of the dryawall. THAT kind of patience, I don't have.
Good luck with your project.

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