I've always understood that studs for example are spaced at 400/600mm and that sheet materials are sized to correspond to these spacings. In reality whenever I've built a stud wall or any number of sheds, it's never ended up going totally to plan in terms of the spacing.
What I don't understand is that the first cover of the sheet material is typically over a double distance (it should cover a whole stud - so lets say for ease 40mm), the sheet material "joins" in the middle of the span only covers half a stud (20mm) and the last should cover 50mm. I don't understand how even if a wall was built in totally perfect divisions of 2400mm (let's say my span is 7200mm) , how I would perfectly cover the last 40mm of stud or is my maths wrong?
My question is the same when thinking about laying down OSB onto joists on a new shed project. I suppose that's even more confusing because that is sized in imperial measurements!
I can't work in imperial and am a fully paid up mm man. Can anyone help me? I know this is a stupid beginner's question, but I've been googling around for a while and can't seem to find a very clear explanation.
Please help!
What I don't understand is that the first cover of the sheet material is typically over a double distance (it should cover a whole stud - so lets say for ease 40mm), the sheet material "joins" in the middle of the span only covers half a stud (20mm) and the last should cover 50mm. I don't understand how even if a wall was built in totally perfect divisions of 2400mm (let's say my span is 7200mm) , how I would perfectly cover the last 40mm of stud or is my maths wrong?
My question is the same when thinking about laying down OSB onto joists on a new shed project. I suppose that's even more confusing because that is sized in imperial measurements!
I can't work in imperial and am a fully paid up mm man. Can anyone help me? I know this is a stupid beginner's question, but I've been googling around for a while and can't seem to find a very clear explanation.
Please help!