Plasterboard
Plasterboard grades, sheet sizes, screw types and spacing per AS/NZS 2589, install sequence, common defects, supplier list. Plain English with NCC and AS citations.
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Internal wall and ceiling lining. Pick the grade for the location, fix to the right substrate at the right spacing per AS/NZS 2589, then set and jointed.
What it is
Plasterboard, also called Gyprock or drywall. Gypsum core, paper faces, fixed to timber or steel framing.
Properties
| Property | Standard options |
|---|---|
| Width | 1200mm |
| Length | 2400, 2700, 3000, 3600, 4200, 4800, 6000mm |
| Thickness | 10mm (ceilings), 13mm (walls), 16mm (fire / impact), 25mm (shaftliner) |
| Edge profile | Recessed (RE) for jointed finish. Square (SE) behind cornice or tile. |
Sheet weight (manual handling)
| Sheet | Approx weight |
|---|---|
| 10mm 1200x4800 | 30 to 35 kg |
| 13mm 1200x3600 | 35 to 40 kg |
| 16mm fire-rated 1200x3600 | 50+ kg |
Two-person lift or sheet trolley above 25 kg.
Grades
| Grade | Where to use |
|---|---|
| Standard (white) | Dry walls and ceilings |
| Water-resistant (green / aqua) | Splash zones outside the shower. Not a tile substrate inside showers. |
| Fire-rated (pink) | Garage-to-house wall, between dwellings, service shafts. Use the tested system. |
| Impact-resistant | High-traffic walls, hallways, kids’ rooms |
| Acoustic | Bedroom walls, party walls, media rooms |
| Sag-resistant | Insulated ceilings or 600mm joist centres |
| Foil-backed | Where vapour barrier is required |
Where to use
- Internal walls and ceilings on framed construction
- Behind cornices or square-set details
- Splash zones (water-resistant grade, not in showers)
- Garage / dwelling separation walls (fire-rated tested system)
- Acoustic separation between bedrooms or party walls (acoustic grade in tested system)
Where NOT to use
- As a tile substrate inside a shower enclosure. Use cement sheet or certified tile-backer per AS 3740.
- Externally. Even water-resistant grade is internal-use only.
- In place of fire-rated grade where NCC requires one.
- Bridged across structural movement joints. Cracks guaranteed.
- Over green or wet timber framing. Screw pops and joint cracking will follow.
- As a structural member. Bracing comes from the frame, not the lining.
Fixing
Screw type by substrate
| Substrate | Thread | Length (13mm sheet) | Tip |
|---|---|---|---|
| Timber stud / joist | Coarse | 30 to 32mm | Bugle head |
| Steel stud | Fine | 25 to 30mm | Drill-point or self-piercing |
Coarse on softwood pine, fine on steel. Wrong thread strips or fails to hold.
Screw spacing (per AS/NZS 2589)
| Location | General | At sheet ends |
|---|---|---|
| Walls (to studs) | 300mm | 200mm |
| Ceilings (to joists) | 230mm | 150mm |
Fire-rated and acoustic systems: follow the tested system spec, not the general rule.
Sheet orientation
- Walls: long edge perpendicular to studs (horizontal)
- Stagger end joints by at least one stud bay
- Recessed edges run perpendicular to studs/joists for jointing
Install sequence
- Frame check. Studs and joists straight, plumb, square, at correct centres.
- Mark up service penetrations from frame plan.
- Hang ceilings first, then walls.
- Cut by score-snap-cut. Rasp the cut edge.
- Fix with the correct screw at correct spacing. Heads just below paper, no breakthrough.
- Set and jointed by plasterer: tape coat, fill coat, finish coat. Sand between.
- Cornice or square-set last.
Full procedure: AS/NZS 2589:2017. Manufacturer literature: CSR Gyprock Red Book, Knauf Australia tech docs.
Tolerances and acceptance
What “good” looks like in the finished state, before paint and at handover.
Numerical
| Item | Limit | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Surface flatness, paint-grade walls | AS 2589 Level 4 finish (typical residential paint) | AS/NZS 2589:2017 |
| Surface flatness, gloss / critical light | AS 2589 Level 5 finish (full skim coat) | AS/NZS 2589:2017 |
| Wall plumb | Per current HIA Guide and state Guide to Standards and Tolerances. Pending HIA member access. [HIA-001] | HIA Guide / state guide |
| Wall straightness under a long straightedge | Per current HIA Guide and state guide. Pending HIA member access. [HIA-002] | HIA Guide / state guide |
| Joint ridge / depression | Not visible from the AS 2589 viewing distance under normal light | AS/NZS 2589:2017 |
| Screw set | Heads just below paper face, no breakthrough, no protrusion | AS/NZS 2589:2017 |
| Cornice line | Straight, no obvious dips, mitres tight (per HIA Guide qualitative criteria, exact wording pending). [HIA-003] | HIA Guide |
Visual acceptance
- Viewing distance: per AS/NZS 2589:2017 finish-level inspection requirements, with normal indoor lighting. Numerical viewing distance pending verification against the current AS clause. [HIA-004]
- Lighting condition: ambient indoor light at the time of inspection. Don’t judge under raking low-angle light unless that’s the room’s actual day-to-day condition.
- Critical-light walls (large windows, gloss paint, downlight wash) need Level 5 finish, not Level 4.
Defects typical at PCI
- Screw pops (frame moisture moved after lining)
- Joint ridges visible under raking light
- Hairline cracks at door corners, architrave junctions
- Patches showing through paint (different sheen)
- Cornice gaps at mitres
- Set joints showing through skim where Level 5 was specified but not delivered
For finish-level disagreements at PCI, AS 2589 Levels 1 to 5 is the arbiter. Specify the level in the contract or scope.
Working with other trades
Before lining (first fix)
- Plumber: rough-in pipework and waste runs in. No retrofitting wet-area linings.
- Sparky: cabling, conduits, mounting boxes set to depth.
- HVAC: ducts run, register positions marked.
- Comms / data: cables pulled and terminated.
- Insulation: batts or board installed per energy report.
- Pad-out blocks / noggings: marked on frame plan during framing for vanity, benchtop bracket, TV mount, wall-hung WC, grab rails.
During lining
- Site clean, dry, and warm enough for compound to cure.
- Sheet plan confirmed against frame layout before cutting.
After lining (second fix)
- Sparky returns for fittings (downlights, GPOs). Hole saws can shred fresh joints. Penalty clauses help.
- Plumber returns for fixtures.
- Painter primes and finishes.
- Tiler in wet areas only over correct substrate. If grade is wrong, build stops.
See first fix / second fix sequence for the full choreography.
Health & safety
- Silica dust: cutting and sanding generates RCS and gypsum dust. Workplace exposure standard for RCS is 0.05 mg/m3 (8-hour TWA). Use M-class or H-class shadow-vac sanders or wet sand. P2 mask minimum.
- Manual handling: two-person lift above 25 kg, or use sheet trolley. Sheets are awkward, not just heavy.
- Sharp edges: paper cuts on edges, metal banding cuts when uncrating.
- Asbestos lookalike: pre-1985 buildings may have asbestos-containing linings (Tilux, Wunderlich Fibrolite). Modern plasterboard contains no asbestos but old fibre-cement linings can. Test before disturbing.
- Joint compound: skin and eye irritant. Standard PPE.
Suppliers
- CSR Gyprock: largest market share. The Red Book is the install bible.
- Knauf Australia: full grade range, strong on fire-rated and acoustic systems.
- Siniat (Etex): full range.
- USG Boral: now part of Knauf.
Trade pickup: building merchants, Bunnings Trade, plasterboard wholesalers (Plasterboard Wholesalers, Wright Forbes, others by region).
[Sponsor / preferred installer slot. ACCC disclosure required.]
What can go wrong
- Screw pops: wrong screw type, wrong length, green frame, or too few screws.
- Joint cracking: no tape, rushed coats, frame movement, or hairline cracks at door corners.
- Ceiling sag: insulation overweight for grade, screws too few, joists at wrong centres.
- Wet area damage: wrong grade in shower or behind splashback. Rip-out, not patch.
- Failed fire-rated system: wrong screw spacing, missing layer, unsealed penetration. Re-test required.
- Sound rating compromised: downlights cutting both leaves of a sound wall, services bridging.
- Edge chip / damaged corners: over-sanded edges, impact damage. Patchable, obvious in raking light.
- Compound shrinkage / ghost joints: too thick a coat, not enough cure between coats.
References
- AS/NZS 2589:2017, Gypsum linings, Application and finishing (Standards Australia) (verified 2026-05-02)
- AS 3740-2021, Waterproofing of domestic wet areas (Standards Australia) (verified 2026-05-02)
- NCC 2022 Volume Two, Class 1 and 10 buildings (residential), ABCB (verified 2026-05-02)
- HIA Guide to Materials and Workmanship (national, Housing Industry Association) (verified 2026-05-02)
- State workmanship guides: VBA (VIC), NSW Fair Trading, QBCC (QLD), CBS (SA), BSA (WA)
- CSR Gyprock Red Book (CSR), Knauf Australia tech docs (Knauf), Siniat docs
- WHS Codes of Practice (state-by-state) for silica dust and manual handling
Related
- Screws and fasteners
- Joint compound
- Plasterer (trade)
- AS/NZS 2589 (regulation)
- Internal linings (practical)
- Fire-rated systems (practical)
- Wet areas (practical)
- AS 2589 finish levels (glossary)
See also
- Cornice
- Cement sheet
- Sparky (trade)
- Plumber (trade)
- Cabinetmaker (trade)
- First fix / second fix sequence (process)
- AS 3740 waterproofing (regulation)
- PCI (glossary)
- Defects list (glossary)
- Tolerance (glossary)
Last updated: 2026-05-02. Verified: 2026-05-02. Quarterly review for AS / NCC currency.