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Jun 29 at 0:45 answer added Kyle timeline score: 0
Jun 23 at 17:30 comment added cr0 @Huesmann very helpful, thanks. Even just the one stud you depict on the bottom right seems like it would do the trick for a drywall end connection. Then I might tie the two walls together with a horizontal brace, or leave as is. I figure the simpler the cavity between the two, the easier it is to fill with rockwool
Jun 22 at 12:35 comment added Huesmann @cr0 does this help? imgur.com/X702vLZ
Jun 21 at 23:37 history became hot network question
Jun 21 at 17:47 comment added cr0 @Huesmann I'm a little confused where you mean to put each stud. Would you be able to sketch it onto one of the images? Between where wires go and where drywall goes, I'm finding it a confusing corner
Jun 21 at 17:25 comment added Huesmann I would consider simply adding a stud at 90º to the end stud on the wired wall, and butting up another stud to that on the non-wired wall. That will strengthen your drywall corner.
Jun 21 at 15:50 answer added isherwood timeline score: 6
Jun 21 at 15:49 history edited isherwood CC BY-SA 4.0
edited title
Jun 21 at 15:46 answer added RMDman timeline score: 11
Jun 21 at 15:43 comment added crip659 The gap not that big of a problem. Should be an extra stud for the drywall on the inside.
Jun 21 at 15:33 history asked cr0 CC BY-SA 4.0