Hello,
I've framed and it looks like it does in the picture.

My question:
Should there be noggings at the edges, like the red one, or is what I've done sufficient?

Grateful for any answers.
 
  • Diagram showing framing with horizontal lines at 50cc and 45cc intervals. Red arrow pointing to the edge, indicating suggested placement for noggings.
AXS
We don't know what you're going to do, so it's hard to answer...
 
Sorry, plywood will be put up and then drywall, it's for the kitchen.
There was concrete underneath, then framed.

Grateful for a response
 
Floor mao?

Plywood and gypsum are a somewhat unusual solution, but if you compare it with particle board flooring, which is probably more stable, it should have short strips at the walls according to the instructions.
 
Well? I think it's a wall, plywood + gypsum sounds like a wall to me. But still, the information is insufficient.
As said, wall or floor?
If wall, what then? Are you going to hang cabinets? Will there be tiles on the wall? Or tile on the floor?
 
silly me, sorry for the bad info.

It is a wall, kitchen cabinets are to be hung on the wall.
Then tiles etc. on the drywall, etc.

Grateful for all responses.
 
Why regla if so?
 
Hmm, have you built a new wall, or added studs to an old one, and is the drawing oriented correctly, i.e., are the studs vertical or horizontal? Just curious. I would have used cross battens in any case..
 
Kitchen cabinets I suppose you mean? ;) If I were to tile the wall, I would use battens even if it's just a kitchen wall, all to ensure it doesn't move more than necessary.
 
Building out a wall to have a new smoother surface and to reroute cables behind it, for lamps, etc.

It is horizontally framed, as it looks in the picture.

Thanks for all the answers
 
To complicate it for you, I had kortlat behind all the joints...
 
A bit strange with horizontal battens..

Block at the sheet joints and stagger the gypsum by half a sheet's width in relation to the plywood.
 
You mean, you don't place the plywood and drywall seams in the same place?

Does it matter if you lay the sheets horizontally or vertically??
 
Well, it matters... it's common to place a rail against the floor and one against the ceiling, then place vertical studs in between, with center-to-center spacing adjusted for the boards you intend to use. That way, you avoid bracing at all.
 
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