No, it won't.
If you mean 50 degrees 'f' of temperature, NO I've seen it installed in much colder conditions than that.
dung, drywall
Usually 5/8" .
24 + 24 for the ceiling.
No drywall is not a good shock absorber. It's too rigid.
For interior walls you want to use 1/2 inch size drywall. You want to use the thicker drywall because its stronger and it's a lot harder to damage than the thinner drywall.
Drywall is a panel made of gypsum plaster pressed between two thick sheets of paper. Drywall is a necessity in most building projects. Some examples of drywall equipment are drywall arches, decorative outside corners, celling accents and trays, panels on walls.
Drywall panelssheetrock
idk so i think driftwood or a drywall I don't know srry!!!:(nuts and bolts are a building material.
Drywall (plasterboard) it is the hydrated form of calcium sulphate (gypsum).
I think you might mean gyprock - this is a type of building material which is similar to drywall, having many layers and is used for the interior ceilings and walls of a building.
Depends on your local by-laws or codes.