T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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118.2 | wafer board blues | VLNVAX::LEVESQUE | The Dukes a DINK! | Thu May 05 1988 15:47 | 8 |
|
Any builder using wafer board is just cutting corners. I
personally would stay away from it. Unless of course you like
wafer board. Honestly though, its the absolute cheapest way to
build. You'll see it in cheapo prefabs all the time.
BAL
|
118.3 | Don't worry about it | ALIEN::WEISS | Trade freedom for security-lose both | Thu May 05 1988 16:22 | 23 |
| > Any builder using wafer board is just cutting corners.
I imagine the same sort of thing was said about plywood for a long time when it
first came out - but now no one would even think of using milled boards for
sheathing. Waferboard is in fact the absolute cheapest way to build. That says
nothing about whether it is any good or not. Everything I've seen says it's
more than strong enough for sheathing - and even strong enough to use as roof
decking. When I built my house, I used it for the sheathing, but I used
plywood for the roof decking - the specs on the waferboard say it's fine for
decking, but I felt that same baseless uneasyness about using it there. I
probably should have used it, and saved a couple of hundred bucks.
It's certainly a good idea to be wary about any new product - the masonite
clapboards they came out with about 10 years ago are absolute junk - but I
think waferboard has passed the test by now.
I'm actually facing a similar question right now myself. I'm building a
garage, and wondering whether to use waferboard or plywood. I can't think of
any reason to be concerned about the waferboard, but I don't like the look of
the stuff, and it's going to be visible on the interior of the garage. The
question right now is - do I dislike the look of it $300 worth?
Paul
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118.4 | Plywood??? Yuk... | VIDEO::FINGERHUT | | Thu May 05 1988 16:27 | 9 |
| > I imagine the same sort of thing was said about plywood for a long time
>when it first came out - but now no one would even think of using milled
> boards for sheathing.
My house has them.
(Maine Post & Beam uses shiplap for the side sheathing, or at least
they did 5 years ago).
|
118.5 | is this a reason for concern? | MYCRFT::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Thu May 05 1988 16:29 | 8 |
|
Not sure about this, but... Ever see a piece of waferboard left out
in the rain? It swells up to almost twice its normal thickness. This
makes me wonder what happens if a leak develops in the roofing or siding
over the waferboard. Wouldn't the damage occur more quickly -- and be
much more extensive -- than for plywood?
JP
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118.6 | Beware for gas irritation | NSSG::FEINSMITH | | Thu May 05 1988 16:30 | 10 |
| re .1, the formaldehyde problem with the glues in the waferboard
can be a problem to people sensitive to it. This is especially true
of the waferboard was also used for subflooring and not properly
sealed. I have a friend whose house used waferboard and I noticed
the irritating gassing as soon as I walked in (and his was supposedly
sealed). It took a few years (!!) for it not to be irritating any
more. I still feel that plywood is better (just built a house with
no waferboard it it).
Eric
|
118.7 | A consideration... | VAXWRK::BSMITH | Carnival Personnel Only...DAMN! | Thu May 05 1988 16:41 | 6 |
| re:.3>
I suppose if you ever sold the house, a buyer may be unimpressed that
wafer board was used.
Brad.
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118.8 | | VIDEO::FINGERHUT | | Thu May 05 1988 16:54 | 7 |
| When the sun goes low and throws shadows across your roof you can
see where waferboard sagged between rafters. There will appear
to be a ridge running up your roofline where each rafter is.
It doesn't look very good. It takes about a year for this to show
up, and it might only show up if the sun hits the roof at the right
angle.
|
118.9 | How are they going to know. | DEBIT::LAVASH | Same as it ever was... | Thu May 05 1988 17:03 | 6 |
| If the wafer board was used for just the sheathing how can the next
buyer tell the differnce? If it was used for the roof a trip through
the attic would show the wafer but who checks under the clapboards
when buying a house?
George
|
118.10 | | VAXWRK::INGRAM | Larry Ingram | Thu May 05 1988 17:17 | 7 |
| > If the wafer board was used for just the sheathing how can the next
> buyer tell the differnce?
Well, the author of the base note found out.
Larry
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118.11 | Foil covered thermal boards in Colorado. | CLOSUS::HOE | Colorado's the place to be. | Thu May 05 1988 18:49 | 9 |
| If you think that wafer board is cheap, then don't buy a house in
Colorado. the builders use a thermal insulate board that is more
dense than corregated cardboard but less dense than masonite. The
board has a foil on either side and is usually stapled to the house
with the siding right on top of that. The board has no structural
strength. Can't imagine that they could use that stuff in earthquake
country.
/cal
|
118.12 | plywood ain't what it used to be ... | FREDW::MATTHES | | Fri May 06 1988 09:09 | 8 |
| re ~~.2 Paul on building your garage...
I went the wafer board route. My neighbor felt as you do and went
with plywood. He wished he had gone with the wafer board.
The plywood that they are manufacturing these days is not what
it used to be. There are many internal voids. He was very unhappy
to have spent all that money buying quality and not getting it.
|
118.13 | Visible roof sag between joists/rafters | STAR::SWIST | Jim Swist ZKO3-4/U14 381-1264 | Fri May 06 1988 10:24 | 5 |
| re: .8
Visible sag between joists is not limited to waferboard. Code lets
you put 1/2" sheathing on the roof on 24" centers. After enough
years of snow loading, you'll see sag on CDX plywood.
|
118.14 | Now you see it, now you don't... | VINO::GRANSEWICZ | Did you see that?! | Fri May 06 1988 11:03 | 5 |
|
I've seen waferboard after a water leak. The stuff literally
disintegrates. I think plywood would be more durable.
Phil
|
118.15 | 1/2" too thin for roofs | NETMAN::SEGER | this space intentionally left blank | Fri May 06 1988 13:58 | 4 |
| I put 1/2 plywood on a roof on the addition I built on my last house and saw
sags even on 16" centers. For a few extra bucks I put 5/8 on my current roof.
-mark
|
118.16 | Waferboard <> Plywood as sheathing | AKOV88::CRAMER | | Fri May 06 1988 14:38 | 26 |
| The question of what sheathing material to use is based on what
you expect from sheathing.
In standard stick construction (2x4s as opposed to post and beam)
the sheathing is supposed to act as a gusset to keep the walls from
racking in the breeze.
Plywood, even stuff with voids, will do this; waferboard will not.
The side to side pressure will enlarge the nail holes so that you
have no stability.
Any wall sheathed with waferboard, or insulation board (30 years
ago they were using something that looked like 5/8" thick tar paper)
must have additional wind braces (diagonal braces cut into the
wall framing in the corners). These can present problems with window
and door placement.
When wafer board first came out the General contractor (a good one)
I was working for tried some out. It had been sold as though it
was just like plywood. After we had the house sheathed we went up
and started to shingle the roof. One guy could get the whole house
rocking by shifting his weight. Needless to say we immediately went
back and cut in the wind braces. The GC never used the stuff again.
Neither will I.
Alan
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118.17 | Waferboard or Particle Board? | WORSEL::DOTY | ESG Systems Product Marketing | Fri May 06 1988 19:21 | 28 |
| Looks like there might be a bit of confusion here:
There are two different types of sheet material made from little
pieces of wood: particle board and wafer board.
Particle board is made of sawdust glued together. It is HEAVY,
smooth, dense, and cheap. It is also very weak (you can literally
break it in two with your hands), and turns to mush after being
soaked. Particle board is good for applications where you need
a very smooth surface, such as when you are laminating countertops.
Wafer board, and a newer version called oriented strand board, is
made up of flakes of wood -- typically 4"-6" long -- glued together.
It is comparable in strength to plywood, usually has a somewhat
lumpy surface, and is a little heavier than plywood. Waferboard
does not fall apart when wet -- I made a cover for a wood pile from
waferboard, and left it outside with no protection or finish. After
weathering for a couple of years, the surface was beginning to
delaminate a little, but it was still sound. Plywood would have
weathered at least as much.
I'll admit an emotional preference for plywood, but after working
with some of the junk plywood that is around today, I'm beginning
to wonder.
One significant disadvantage of waferboard is that the glue is rough
on tools -- either use carbide blades, or be prepared to go through
a lot of saw blades.
|
118.18 | | VINO::GRANSEWICZ | Did you see that?! | Mon May 09 1988 13:27 | 14 |
|
RE: .17
> lumpy surface, and is a little heavier than plywood. Waferboard
> does not fall apart when wet -- I made a cover for a wood pile from
> waferboard, and left it outside with no protection or finish. After
There is no confusion on my part here. I know what particle
board is. I know what waferboard is. I saw waferboard used as
sheating after it had been soaked (faulty deck installation) and
the stuff was *falling apart*. Maybe there is interior/exterior
grade waferboard.
Phil
|
118.19 | RESALE RESALE RESALE | VLNVAX::LEVESQUE | The Dukes a DINK! | Tue May 10 1988 14:32 | 21 |
|
After reading most of the replies, It looks like wafer board gets
the ax. I've talk to a couple contractors on the subject and they
repeated my original reply. "The stuff is junk and only used to
save money". I consider a house a long time investment that deserves
the best materials. A savings of 3 hundred bucks on a 100,000 dollar
house is not worth considering.
Those power staplers they use to put shingles on prefabs have
to be on low low low power or else they blow holes right through
wafer board.
Do your own test go to a lumber yard and buy a sheet of plywood
and one wafer board. Then try to snap off the corner with your hand.
Wafer board breaks apart, but you won't snap the plywood.
Always buy with resale value in mind!! Wafer board is not good for
resale value, ask any realtor!!
BAL
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118.20 | Plywood - C side in or out? | MUSKIE::BLACK | I always run out of time and space to finish .. | Tue Jun 13 1989 10:23 | 10 |
|
I am using plywood - CDX to be exact. Everytime that I do sheathing,
I have to ask myslef the question ... does the 'C' side go in or
out? I am about ready to put some on my three season porch so thought
I'd ask. I'll end up looking it up somewhere if I get no answer
here. My house is about 18 years old - looking at the garage from
inside, some shows the C side and some the D ... so I can't rely
on that! Memory serves me that the C side goes in. Agree??
|
118.21 | | WOODRO::DCOX | | Tue Jun 13 1989 11:50 | 5 |
| The "C" & "D" refer to the quality of the sanding finish on the two sides. Put
whatever side you want on the outside. That which makes it exterior, "X", is
the glue that hold the plys together.
Dave
|
118.22 | Out of curiosity | RAVEN1::RICE_J | This space for rent cheap! | Tue Jun 13 1989 14:42 | 5 |
| re .21
Which side (C or D) has the higher quality finish?
Jim
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118.23 | | MISFIT::DEEP | Set hidden by moderator | Tue Jun 13 1989 15:31 | 8 |
| > Which side (C or D) has the higher quality finish?
C.
Plywood grades from A-D dictate the size of possible imperfections and
patches. A being the best and D being whatever happens to get put on.
Bob
|
118.24 | It's probably irrelevant | BOSTON::SWIST | Jim Swist BXO 224-1699 | Wed Jun 14 1989 16:06 | 5 |
| Theoretically, you put the C side outside since it should be smoother
and there is less chance of visible imperfections in siding/shingling
due to an uneven surface, but this is a pretty fine point since
(a) it's unlikely to be a problem, and (b) the C and D sides of
CDX ply aren't all that different.
|
118.27 | OFF-GASSING of man made wood products | DECSIM::DEMBA | | Thu Aug 31 1989 13:54 | 43 |
| I looked around for other notes on this, but couldn't
find any listed. The most likely place I would have
thought to have found it was in AIR_QUALITY. Didn't
even find any topics on RADON.
I am looking for actual hard figures on off-gassing
for products, in particular particle board VS. plywood.
When I collected some figures for cost on the two products
what I found was that the plywood at nearly $20 a sheet of
5/8" was twice the cost of particle board. The last time I
purchased any plywood was 3.5 years ago and for 5/8" it
was about $11. What an increase!
Unfortunately I put down the particle board to save $100.
The smell was pretty strong the first month, but now is
unnoticable. But I am still concerned with the dangers from
this product.
An article I just on this subject didn't give any details
on how bad these formaldehyde based products are in comparison
with each other. It did say the dangers from these products
can last for years. It also said that hardboard gives off the
least of these gases, but I assume they were speaking of the
stuff that is aboout 1/8" thick.
The only other choice I had was 440 board which is
stuck together with wax, therefore no formaldehyde. One of
the drawbacks is that it can be easily be punctured with
high heels, etc.
Another possibility I have considered was letting particle
board off-gas for a year with no one using the room (it will take me
that long to finish anyway) and then painting it. Probably
only to cover with some formaldehyde based carpeting.
But if I can find some carpeting that doesn't have all this
crap in it, I'll buy it.
So, should I rip this stuff up and put down the 440?
thanks, Steve
|
118.28 | No answers -- but more thoughts... | IMBACQ::SCHMIDT | Bush: Triumph of rites over rights | Fri Sep 01 1989 13:44 | 29 |
| Steve:
There are (apparently) some European standards for formaldehyde
emmisions as at least one the high-line European cabinet makers
crows about how their cabinets meets the standard. I have no
idea if there are similar American standards.
As I understand it, a lot of the "do I care or not" argument depends
on an individual's susceptibility to formaldehyde. Some individuals
are very promptly affected by very low concentrations while others
seem quite tolerant. (I've built and lived with a fair number of
unfaced flake-board projects and can't claim to have noticed any
effects.)
It probably also depends upon how well the adhesive was formulated/
catalyzed. As you'll recall from the UFFI disaster, the amount of
formaldehyde emmitted from the insulation was *VERY* variable, to
saythe least.
Are there any reports of long-term carcinogenic effects? (I think
so but I don't know at what thresholds.)
And choice of flakeboard versus other materials may not solve the
problem, as even plywood is layed-up with similar glues.
What's the finish flooring going to be? What avenues of gas escape
exist from the bottom-side of the particleboard?
Atlant
|
118.29 | | CSC32::GORTMAKER | whatsa Gort? | Mon Sep 04 1989 06:19 | 5 |
| FWIW- Spider Plants are well known for their ability to absorb
formeldehyde from the air(almost to the point of becoming toxic
themselves) maybe hanging a few in the room might help.
|
118.30 | long time | SVCRUS::KROLL | | Tue Sep 05 1989 19:26 | 7 |
| for someone who is sensitive it takes about 3 years. also normal
people will develop alergies. stick with the plywood of less glues.
I have found a manuafacture that produces some thing called apple
core plywood that off gasses in two months. it costs $70 for 3/4
sheet and only comes in maple. this does have formalhyde as the
glue base but does not have voids so there is not large areas of
glue only to take a long time to off gas.
|
118.25 | what am I getting into? | WUMBCK::FOX | | Sat Nov 10 1990 03:37 | 12 |
| Another item on this unfinished house I'm looking at is there are some
areas where the sheathing was left exposed. Two small areas on either
side of the chimmney on the west side of the house, another small section
on the north side. The broker stated the house has been in this
condition for about a year (that means 18-24 months in reality).
Should the sheathing (plywood) be replaced? What should I check for
to see if it's still sound? Could there be damage to the frame from
the sheathing being exposed for so long? Also, the tyvek either blew
off or was removed from the west side. What is the best way to "patch"
it so that barrier stays intact?
John
|
118.26 | Aspenite Sheathing? | GUIDUK::ABARBANELL | | Tue Nov 12 1991 00:07 | 14 |
| I hope this is the right place for this question -- if not, please
refer me elsewhere. Now that I know what "sheating" is (thanks to
this note), I am wondering what you know about "aspenite sheathing".
I am looking at a new house, and the specs for frame say:
"2x4 exterior walls"
"Aspenite sheathing"
Is this just another newer improved form of waferboard, or something
else?
Thanks for your help.
Carol
|