Citizendia
Your Ad Here

In light-frame construction, furring strips are long thin strips of wood or metal used to make backing surfaces to support the finished surfaces in a room. Framing, in construction known as light frame construction, is a building technique based around structural members usually called studs, which provide a stable Furring refers to the backing surface, the process of installing it, and may also refer to the strips themselves.

Furring strips typically measure 1" x 2" or 1" x 3". They can be laid out perpendicular to studs or joists and nailed to them, or set vertically against an existing wall surface. The spacing between the strips depends on the type of finishing material. Wider spacing is typically used behind the heavy boards that support ceramic tiles. Closely spaced strips are needed for thin panelling or plaster. The use of strips with plaster, however, is called either lath and plaster or wattle and daub. Lath and plaster is a building process used mainly for Interior walls in Canada and the United States until the late 1950s Wattle and daub (or wattle-and-daub) is a Building material used for making walls in which a woven lattice of wooden strips called wattle is daubed

Metal furring strips can be used in towns where fire-proof supporting elements are required by the local building code. Often called "hat channels" to describe the profile (cross section), two flanges on each side of trapezoid shape, with a dimension of 7/8th of an inch thickness.

Furring is also used to support roof materials and may be seen under barn and shed roofs, but is often replaced in contemporary times by labor-saving plywood. Plywood is a type of Engineered board made from thin sheets of Wood, called plies or veneers Drywall has become the most common interior wall finishing material and doesn't need furring due to its strength. For the musical group "Drywall" see Drywall (musical project Drywall is a common manufactured Building material Furring is still used in remodeling work to fill out uneven sections for resurfacing.

"Firring" is a UK term for wood strips usually 50mm wide usually tapered and fixed above wood roof joists to provide drainage falls below roof boarding.

Furring strips themselves are typically referred to as 'battens' in the UK building industry.

Another, more erudite guess at the derivation is the German word "fuhrung" - guiding or leading, which is in essence the function of these strips.

Dictionary

furring

-verb

  1. Present participle of fur.

-noun

  1. Parts of clothing made from fur.
  2. A coating that resembles fur.
  3. A strip of material used to prepare a wall for plastering.
© 2009 citizendia.org; parts available under the terms of GNU Free Documentation License, from http://en.wikipedia.org
Dapyx Software network: MP3 Explorer | Ebook Manager | Zenithic