![]() |
What type of studs are used to build Villages houses? Our house built in 2005
We purchased a pre-owned designer house and I working to attach items to an inside wall. I used a stud finder to locate the stud and started drilling. Instead of steady resistance and the drill bit drilling deeper as I added pressure, it seemed to drill a while and then quickly go through. Are these metal studs?
On outside walls it felt like wood studs, but I haven’t done much yet on outside walls. Any insights would be appreciated as I have not seen how they actually build houses in the Villages. Thanks in advance. |
Some are wood, some are metal, and some are a combination.
|
Depending on what you are hanging, there are special anchors for metal studs
|
Quote:
|
You can go into Home Depot, Lowe’s or Ace Hardware and they can help you with what you need.
|
In general, with some exceptions - they use wood for structural walls and steel for interior.
Lowes has these in stock last time I checked: Home | Steelstudanchor |
Quote:
|
If you hang around some of the newer areas and watch various crews as they work, you can make the determination yourself what kind of studs they are!
|
There is a device called a walabot that attaches to your phone and will find pipes, wires, and studs behind the drywall. It shows you what material the studs are made of.
|
Quote:
|
Stud types
Quote:
|
For newer homes since 2019, we discovered that there was no rhyme or reason with the Designer homes.
There were a few metal studs but way more wood studs for the interior walls. Was very surprised as we walked thru the homes being constructed in Marsh Bend and the first phase of Deluna near Water Lily. That special tool sounds very interesting! |
Quote:
The thing that irritates me more than anything about the walls is the orange peel texture. They don't do this up north where I come from. I don't like the look of it at all but it's too much work to get rid of it. Trying to do repairs to a wall Is a major pain. I tried a can of DEP orange peel (like 40 bucks) and it kept clogging on me, not to mention it didn't go very far. |
Quote:
|
I have been hanging things on walls for decades, and rarely do I use a stud (metal or wood). I almost always use drywall anchors. If you have a heavy item, using a few toggle bolts 8 inches apart will support a lot of weight. There are some exceptions, such as a television, a large mirror, etc. But, I have seen homeowners spend a lot of unnecessary time and effort attaching an item to a stud, when a drywall anchor will do just fine.
I once installed the Container Store Elfa system in a garage. Their system uses drywall anchors every 8 inches to attach a single horizontal bracket around top of the room. Everything else, shelving, cabinets, etc. is hung from that one bracket, and it will hold almost anything you would store in a garage. I think they even have a demonstration in their stores to prove how much weight their drywall system will support. |
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 11:54 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
Search Engine Optimisation provided by
DragonByte SEO v2.0.32 (Pro) -
vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2025 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.