sheetrock or wood to line the walls

Bigjim34

Well-Known Member
Sheetrock would be fine millions of people live in humid places with Sheetrock on their walls
 

Lordhooha

Well-Known Member
going to finish insulation and then sheetrock or wood the the walls of the grow room. which would be better? Im not in construction so....yeah.
Sheetrock would be fine. I built my rooms all using sheetrock. Years later no issues. Just took a few down to add on and no issues. In the south all homes are plain ole sheetrock and no issues there. So theres that.
 

OldMedUser

Well-Known Member
Personally if it's a room dedicated to just the grow I'd insulate then cover with panda film. White side out of course. :)

Excellent vapour barrier and at less than a $100 to cover 1000 sq.ft it's a cheaper alternative.
 

Lordhooha

Well-Known Member
Personally if it's a room dedicated to just the grow I'd insulate then cover with panda film. White side out of course. :)

Excellent vapour barrier and at less than a $100 to cover 1000 sq.ft it's a cheaper alternative.
After painting I covered everything in orca grow film. Super tuff stuff.
 

Gilligans Island

Well-Known Member
As stated above 3/4" plywood allows you to screw anything to the walls anywhere. Works great. Paint it white with a kitchen or bathroom designated paint. Mildew control already mixed.
 

Rrog

Well-Known Member
Wood is Lots of $$ compared to drywall. The ability to shoot a screw anywhere is overrated.

I would only use drywall, personally. 5/8” thick. There is no 3/4” drywall
 

TacoMac

Well-Known Member
going to finish insulation and then sheetrock or wood the the walls of the grow room. which would be better? Im not in construction so....yeah.
Either.

Wood will mold and mildew just as fast as regular drywall will. I always use the green treated 5/8ths drywall as it's actually mold and mildew resistant. And as far as mounting and painting, it's actually easier with drywall. Anything you do to wood is done permanently. Anything you do to drywall can easily be patched if you decide to go a different direction later on.

Drywall is simple cheaper, more resistant to mold and mildew (the green kind) and more versatile, so I would go with the green treated drywall...but that's just me.
 

patrickkawi37

Well-Known Member
Disagree.

Having been in construction since the early ‘80’s you can hang all sorts of heavy things on drywall. And there’s still wood studs every 16”.
If I want a fan to go in spot A... my OCD isn't going to allow me to move it 16 inches any direction I want it right where it goes. If that's something you don't mind dealing with than by all means use drywall. I'm not a construction guy I'm a pot farmer
 

Rrog

Well-Known Member
You can hang any of this on drywall. All sorts of drywall anchors, toggles, etc.

And drywall is far easier and generally cheaper to install and SEAL. The ass-ache factor is completely worse with OSB and ply. Not to mention off-gassing of OSB

I’d stick with 5/8” drywall. Denser, quieter, stronger. But that’s just me.
 
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