Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Differentiate Between Plaster & Drywall

If your home was built after 1960, you probably have drywall instead of plaster.


For hundreds of years, plaster was the exclusive way to finish interior walls in homes and offices. Skilled craftsmen applied the wet plaster to lath --- strips of wood used as a solid base for the plaster. The combination of a housing boom and technological advances led to the use of factory-made drywall, which decreased the labor time and costs of finishing interior walls. While nearly all homes built in the past 50 years contain drywall, determining what type of walls are in your home is a relatively simple process.


Instructions


1. Push a thumbtack or pin into the wall in an inconspicuous spot to test its hardness. Drywall is softer and won't crack. Plaster is much harder. A plaster wall won't want to take the pin and will probably splinter.


2. Find an area in the home where you can see behind the walls or ceilings, perhaps an attic or basement. If you see lath and plaster pushing through, you know you have a plaster wall.


3. Remove a switch plate and look at the electrical wiring. If the wiring is loose and you can see lath, your walls are plaster. If the wiring is enclosed by an electric box, your walls are most likely drywall.








Related posts



    Cracked plaster is common in older homes, because the homes have shifted and settled over the years. This can cause unsightly cracks. If repairing the plaster is not possible or too expensive, ano...
    Old-fashioned plaster walls involved spreading wet plaster over strips of wood lath. Modern drywall is pressed chalk covered in paper and screwed directly to the wall studs. Combining plaster and...
    The walls in a bathroom must resist moisture.The walls in a bathroom are constantly bombarded by heat and moisture. These produce prime conditions for the growth of mold and mildew. Choosing the r...
    Drywall mud and wall plaster are similar materials.The U.S. Gypsum Company introduced drywall in the early 1900s, but its use didn't become widespread until the postwar housing boom in the 1950s....
    The recent housing boom has lead to an unlikely consequence: the installation of a form of drywall now reported to be toxic.When the Chinese drywall problem was first discovered, experts thought t...