Hey!

Currently doing drywall myself and I am using 6x6 cm squared timber around my outside walls.

The problem is they aren’t as stable as the other walls inside the house because of the 6x6 cm squared timbers that are about 30cm distance from each other.

I will screw my plasterboards on the squared timber and only one plasterboard, not two.

I have two pictures of what my construction looks like from far and one from close.

Maybe someone can give me advice before I install the plasterboard onto it.

The only problem I currently see is finding the subconstruction once I put the plasterboards back on. But other than that, if I find them can I install the cabinets safely?

  • guyrocket@kbin.social
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    10 months ago

    In this thread: OP scaring the Americans because they think what they see in OP’s pictures is the extent of the wall.

    If fact, OP is just building out from an existing wall that is behind the OSB in his pictures.

    Grogon, ask a local carpenter. I don’t think Americans understand your German construction.

  • scrion@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    I’ll answer this one in German since this is my time to shine. Let me just say, the wall is perfectly fine, what we see is just another layer of OSB board for ease of installation on top of the actual wall behind it (which is well framed and insulated).

    Dies ist ein sehr unterhaltsamer thread fuer mich, da ich beide Seiten verstehen kann.

    Auf der Webseite von Wolf Haus ist die Installationsebene aus OSB zu sehen, die angegebene Punktlast ist 70kg pro Schraube. Wenn du sicherstellst, das deine Schrauben durch die Kanthoelzer in die OSB-Platte gehen, solltest du dich auf diese Angaben verlassen koennen, also eine Schraube haelt dann 70kg.

    Deutschland hat selbstverstaendlich auch eine Norm fuer Kuechenmoebel, DIN 68930. Da bekommst du ein Gefuehl dafuer, wie schwer Kuechenschraenke werden koennen. Die Nachbarn in der Schweiz verwenden die Norm SN EN 14749, zum Vergleich. Es ist nicht ungewoehnlich, einen Schrank (wall cabinet) mit 120kg Belastung zu testen.

    Beachte bitte auch die Distanz der Schrauben, man darf nicht zu nah oder zu weit setzen. Ich habe das hier auf Deutsch gefunden:

    https://www.huettemann.de/lagerkatalog/download/osb4_belastung.pdf

    Ich wuerde immer mit einem margin zur Sicherheit rechnen, vielleicht 20%. Eine Schraube haelt dann also 0.8x70kg = 56kg. Wenn du die Distanzen beachtest und dir das Gewicht deines Schrankes ausrechnest und auf entsprechend viele Schrauben verteilst, solltest du safe sein.

    Ich gehe natuerlich davon aus, das die Installationsebene von Wolf Haus fachgerecht konstruiert wurde.

      • scrion@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        Noch etwas: die beste Methode ist wirklich, sich mit Bleistift vor der Montage der Gipskartonplatten die Lage der Hoelzer zu markieren.

        Falls du das an einer Stelle vergessen hast, kannst du spaeter immer noch einen stud finder verwenden. Ich kenne die amerikanischen brands, habe aber mittlerweile auch solche Geraete gebraucht und getestet.

        Der gruene stud finder von Bosch ist trash, aber der GSM120 aus der professional Reihe funktioniert gut:

        https://www.bosch-professional.com/de/de/products/gms-120-0601081000

        Findet auch elektrische Leitung und Rohre

        • Grogon@lemmy.worldOP
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          10 months ago

          Ja voll cool!

          Ich habe alle Wände abfotografiert und Abmessungen der Lattungen (30cm Abstände) gemerkt. Aber das es sowas gibt ist ja echt wahnsinn. Danke!

    • El Barto@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      Aw come on! I want to learn! I just don’t want to learn German first.

      Edit: D’oh! I had missed the context. All good.

      • scrion@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        Yeah, but they made the thread and mentioned not speaking English well enough and they were really getting confused and anxious by a bunch of us claiming the only way to turn this situation around is to demolish the building - at that point, some helpful reassurance was in order.

        The gist of what I said was: the wall is fine, the manufacturer assures a point load of 70kg for the installation layer (so basically 70kg per screw), looking at some local regulations will give you an idea of how heavy a kitchen wall cabinet can get (going at it from this angle is helpful in case you need to discuss liabilities at some point), distribute that load over screws mounted at proper distances, add a safety margin and you should be good.

        • El Barto@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          Whoops! I had missed that part about struggling with English. You’re a good person. Thanks!

  • ikidd@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    There’s about one person in this thread that knows what is going on. Ignore pretty much everyone else.

      • seathru@lemm.ee
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        10 months ago

        Holy shit, is that load bearing plywood on the far wall (with the rectangle window).

        My friend, you need help from someone that knows what they are doing and familiar with local codes before proceeding any further.

        • Death_Equity@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          They are not American, Germans build way different so how they do things does not make sense without understanding what is going on.

          • Grogon@lemmy.worldOP
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            10 months ago

            I think people don’ know that the “studs” what I didn’t know were are hidden behind the Plywood.

            • roguetrick@kbin.social
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              10 months ago

              Yeah, folks are having a hard time wrapping their head around how it structurally works but it obviously does since they’re building housing developments with it. The picture just shows the sill plate and top plate (the two thick pieces of wood on the top and bottom of the wall behind the OSB[what we call the plywood on the inside]) with insulation sandwiched between, but there has to be lengths of wood going from those to hold them together (which we call studs). They’re mistakenly thinking that your 6x6 cm pieces of wood are those studs.

              • Grogon@lemmy.worldOP
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                10 months ago

                So I guess I should be fine?

                I am having heart attack and panic right now.

                My construction dude told me to apply 6x6 cm squared timber for installation (electricity) and spread the about 30 cm apart from each other around the house. Once the electrician comes and installs everything and is finished I can install plasterboard onto the 6x6cm squared timber.

                I am just not sure if I can hang anything on the plasterboard that is attached to 6x6cm timber. It would be alot more stable if I could get rid of the 6x6cm timber and attach plasterboard to plywood (like the inside walls).

                At the end he said it’s for electricity only and my safety so I don’t break the vapor barrier later if I screw something into the plasterboard. So I have about 6 cm “air” before the “real” wall starts after the plywood.

                Its basically from inside to outside:

                Plasterboard -> 6x6 cm squared timber -> Plywood -> Studs -> Vapor Barrier -> Insulation (240mm wool) ->… in the end the totall wall is about 39cm thick.

                • roguetrick@kbin.social
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                  10 months ago

                  So are the 6x6s attaching just into the plywood or are they going into something behind the plywood? Overall it sounds fine what he told you to do, but what they’re attaching to and how you do what we call “blocking” to secure them is how you determine if you can hang cabinets.

                  Edit: Per your additional information, what you’re doing is fine but I’d ask him specifically about where you want to hang cabinets because you’d need to make more consideration. They put a lot more strain than thin drywall to the fasteners that are holding them up.

        • Pipoca@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          That wall isn’t structural. There’s a much thicker wall behind it; this is just a thin internal layer for running electric and mounting drywall.

          • seathru@lemm.ee
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            10 months ago

            https://i.imgur.com/AbsJjCh.jpeg

            My concern is that those big beams (blue) end where they meet the plywood (yellow). Which means they are transferring their downward force into the board(s) highlighted in green. That in turn presses down on the vertical studs highlighted in red. These aren’t connected to anything on the bottom. So the weight from the beams gets supported by the screws attaching all these pieces to the plywood wall? Maybe if they’re just for looks and not structural support. Maybe that’s how it’s done in germany.

            • roguetrick@kbin.social
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              10 months ago

              Behind the green board, behind the OSB, there is a very thick top plate that those beams are sitting on and based on what the OP said to me, that is then framed down to a sill plate also behind the OSB. Nothing on the outside of the OSB is structural and he’s actually screwing those 6x6 cm boards into what’s behind the OSB. They’re using the OSB as a vapor barrier instead of faced insulation like we do and also protecting the studs with that vapor barrier from the interior of the house.

              Edit: Truth is, what’s funny about OP’s wall and the response it’s getting is that it’s better constructed than most American buildings you could find. We don’t tend to put as big a gap between the vapor barrier and the interior heated space and we don’t tend to include the studs as protected by that vapor barrier. When we do we use plastic sheeting, not OSB, because that’s too expensive. I’d imagine the R value on his insulation is also much higher than ours.

        • roguetrick@kbin.social
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          10 months ago

          All of the OSB is the inside of the already constructed wall. It’s interior fascia, essentially, with insulation behind it.

    • Grogon@lemmy.worldOP
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      10 months ago

      Insulation is already behind the squared timber.

      The wall is actually behind the frame I am putting on the wall. It is an installation level for electricity and I can hang my plasterboards on that.

      The insulation is 240mm thick behind the Plywood. That is where the vapor barrier is and the other plywood.

  • Grumpydaddy@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    We use three horizontal strips of thin flat stock metal attached to the studs with truss head screws before sheetrock to provide solid blocking at top and bottom of upper cabinets and also at top of base cabinets. The stock can be 20 or 22 ga. And 6" wide. You still may want to catch studs as best you can. I posted a picture showing the two strips that hold the upper cabinets. I’m not sure what the metric equivalent to gauge would be but you guys probably have something similar.

  • CyLith@lemm.ee
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    10 months ago

    I would not. 6cm is about 2 1/2 inches and I would not rely on a wall framed any less thick than 4-by (3.5 inches). Thinner means more flexion which will lead to problems of your plaster cracking and cabinet flushness issues. In terms of strength, it’s probably okay, assuming you have fastened that framing solidly.

    The trick to finding your studs is to pre-mark your plaster board and keep transferring those marks outward up to the point of hanging your cabinets.

    • Grogon@lemmy.worldOP
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      10 months ago

      Hi thanks!

      Can I just install more 6x6 cm frames and make it more stable in the area I want to hang something or would that not help?

      In general, I can hang plasterboard on 6x6 though right?

      • CyLith@lemm.ee
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        10 months ago

        No. Beam deflection goes as the inverse 4th power of beam thickness in the direction of bending. Adding more material lateral to the direction of bending does not help.

        Yes, you can certainly hang plasterboard on that.

        • Grogon@lemmy.worldOP
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          10 months ago

          My english isn’t that good I think I can’t follow.

          The beam in that room is holding a top floor and roof and should hold way more. The wall that the beam is sitting on is about 35 cm thick.

          • scrion@lemmy.world
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            10 months ago

            Der Poster ueber dir sprach allgemein uber dir Berechnung der Durchbiegung von Balken, hier die 60x60mm Kanthoelzer.

            • Grogon@lemmy.worldOP
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              10 months ago

              Er meint damit also, dass es nichts bringt, weitere Lattungen anzubringen?

              Mein Plan ist aktuell:

              Küchenanbieter anschreiben und Monteur der Küche ob die Lattungen so in Ordnung sind. Die angebrachte Lattung markieren, sodass der Monteur später dann die Hängeschränke an den Rigips & Lattung schrauben kann und nicht ins “leere” trifft.

      • Coreidan@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        Unless I’m missing something I just don’t see how those studs are providing any real support to the wall.

        Empty cabinets are heavy. I’d be worried about those studs giving way.

        Hard to tell tho just looking at this picture.

        • Grogon@lemmy.worldOP
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          10 months ago

          Those arent studs.

          The Studs are in the wall behind the Plywood.

          That is just 6x6 cm for electricity and safety space not to danage vapor barrier behind the real wall

          • Coreidan@lemmy.world
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            10 months ago

            Then I recommend posting some additional pictures otherwise you’ll never get the insight you’re looking for

  • mipadaitu@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    Are you getting this work inspected by anyone?

    That work, while precise, would not meet code where I live.

    • Grogon@lemmy.worldOP
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      10 months ago

      Yes.

      I have two specialists for wood houses coming.

      The wall behind the 6x6cm timber that I put on is about 40cm thick. I am basically just adding 6x6cm timber for installation (electricity mainly) and to hang my plasterboards. The windows are sitting on a very thick wood inside the main wall behind the 6x6 cm installation floor

  • themeatbridge@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    My advice? Knock that “wall” down and pay a proper carpenter to build a proper one. Your studs are too small, they don’t go all the way down, you have no room for insulation, and if you try to hang cabinets on that thing, you’re going to kill someone when the whole sumremoved collapses.

    My bad, I didn’t know what I was looking at. See OP’s diagram to learn more about this, and ignore my ignorance.

      • themeatbridge@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        Oh, I see. My apologies, I misunderstood what we were looking at. I thought the framing we see was the entire wall, but it’s just non-structural framing on the interior behind the plasterboard to allow space for wiring.

        I am not familiar with this style of construction, so I won’t guess at best practices for hanging cabinets on it. But I would imagine that as long as the wall we see is sufficiently secured to the structural wall behind it, you should be able to hang cabinets. To be safe, you could anchor into the wall, but I don’t know enough to say how to do that without interfering with insulation or vapor barriers.

      • Coskii@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        10 months ago

        That link is extremely helpful. It seems like you’re fine to attach cabinets to the wall after drywall. The osb is tied into some serious wood framing behind it, and as long as you’re using fasteners that reach into the osb, it should be about as solid as you could want.

        The kitchen metal grumpydaddy suggested isn’t expressly needed here, but that’s the most I’d consider doing to it.

    • ikidd@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      It’s just a subwall that’s adding a thermal break. Presumably it’s anchored to the existing wall.

    • scrion@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      Please have a look at the images he posted, the wall is absolutely fine. The images he posted are just the inner installation layer, the structural wall and insulation are behind that.