Chinese Drywall Is Not DRAGONBOARD!

Wayne Parsons
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Posted by Wayne ParsonsMarch 24, 2009 3:01 PM

I posted an article on January 2, 2009 about a problem in the Southeastern states involving toxic odors of sulfur from drywall installed in new homes: "Drywall From China Causes Concern Over Sulfur Odor In Homes".

The story generated a lot of Comments and in the process some facts were not reported accurately. The main misunderstanding that I want to clarify here is that the product referred to as "Chinese Drywall" is not also called "DRAGONBOARD®" or other products identified as magnesium oxide board, MgO board or Mag board. There is no similarity between DRAGONBOARD® and the odorous Chinese drywall that has led to homeowner complaints throughout the Southeast states from Louisiana to Florida. I am including below the two Comments that mentioned DRAGONBOARD®.

The Comment by ManateeKnows is not correct that the offending "Chinese Drywall" is possibly DRAGONBOARD® of some magnesium-based product. The Comment by Bill Randy correctly points out that DRAGONBOARD® is a totally different product that doesn't smell, has never caused these types of problems and could not be the smelly "Chinese Drywall".

I have been in touch with Michael Di Raimondo, Director of Sales for DRAGONBOARD®-US in Edison, NJ. Mr. Di Raimondo kindly sent me samples of their product and invidet me to smell it (no odor) and to put it in water (I did - it still doesn't smell and seems impervious to water). DRAGONBOARD is waterproof and has been subjected to 36 months of freeze-thaw testing, it is UL fire rated and is ASTM D-5628 impact resistant. In addition it is silica/asbestos/foraldehyde free and thus a "green" product.. Mr. Di Raimondo describes DRAGONBOARD as the "GREEN" construction panel of the 21st century. It looks like an excellent product.

If the builders in Florida, like Ryland Homes had given their customers a quality product like DRAGONBOARD instead of the Chinese manufactured - and you can bet "cheap" - foreign drywall, the homeowners whose new homes have been ruined would not have this heartache. As we all know, homebuilders put their money in construction into glamorous visible fixtures and take shortcuts on the structure and on materials that the homeowner cannot see. The Chinese Drywall fiasco is such an example. When will homebuilders, some of which a re huge national corporations, stop doing this shoddy construction taking advantage of their customers for a few extra dollars.

Companies like DRAGONBOARD®-US will hopefully get more calls from the homebuilding industry and home buyers will be given a new home with ethical and high quality materials, even the ones they can't see. In Hawaii we do not have the Chinese Drywall problem. Odd since we are much closer to China. But we do have a building industry that uses cheap materials and shoddy construction in places that the home buyer cannot see.

Here are the Comments that led to this clarifying post:

Posted by ManateeKnows
Friday, January 16, 2009 3:06 PM EST

If you call it drywall, it has to be made of gypsum which is an unlikely culprit. Consider that this stuff is NOT drywall/wallboard. It may be Chinese magnesium oxide board, also called Mag Board, MgO Board and Dragon Board. Wet it and it releases magnesium chloride, corrosive to metal. Heat it and it releases magnesium oxide fumes, cough cough cough.

Posted by Bill Randy
Wednesday, February 25, 2009 10:16 PM EST

To suggest that all boards made in China are bad is like saying all peanuts from the USA contain salmonella. It is an irresponsible approach to the truth.

Knaupf is a legitmate global player and this drywall contains sulfur. They need to honor the claim. It is a legitimate claim but we need to proceed with caution when labeling "chinese drywall...."

One of your respondent says that dragon board and mag board may be suspect as they are made of magnesium oxide and when heated it releases fumes (not true fumes are released in welding metals not baking boards) and when wet it releases magnesium chloride (not true and if it was true its a safe chemical). Magnesium chloride is an important coagulant used in the preparation of tofu from soy milk (safe) and magnesium oxide boards have no mold, no flame, and no smoke.....

As a matter of fact Georgia Pacific, an american company, states in their literature that most us homes have mold growth in them due to paper faced gyspsum drywall. USA fiber cement and cement boards contain silica (causing crystaline silicate problems when breathed).

So again please watch the grouping or else no one will eat Florida tomatoes, california spinach, US hormone rich beef, or georgia peanuts!

Please dispel

14 Comments

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Bobby Bell
Posted by Bobby Bell
March 25, 2009 1:45 AM

Has anyone heard of any available cure outside of removal/replacement? I have read this drywall releases the toxic gas Hydrogen Sulfide. The gas being a byproduct of an anaerobic bacteria. Can anyone confirm the cause other than to say this defective drywall contains sulfur ?

Wayne ParsonsInjuryBoard Attorney Member
Posted by Wayne Parsons
March 25, 2009 2:38 AM

Interesting question Bobby! Let's see if anyone has an answer? The state departments of health and the EPA should help with this.

Michael Di Raimondo
Posted by Michael Di Raimondo
April 02, 2009 9:02 AM

Thank you, Wayne, for acknowledging the innacuracy. It would have been far easier to have simply done what many in other media do when faced with errata. They simply "stand by their story." My sincerest wishes for your success in your worthwhile efforts to promote safety and protect rights.

Michael Di Raimondo
DRAGONBOARD USA

Tom YoungInjuryBoard Staff
Posted by Tom Young
April 02, 2009 9:09 AM

Michael - Thanks for the kudos. Wayne is a most upstanding fella. He's out for the truth, not a particular agenda.

Thanks Wayne for working to change the face of our profession, one post at a time.

Randy McCullough
Posted by Randy McCullough
April 05, 2009 3:21 PM

Please acknowledge the problem of removed chinese wallboard going into landfills,at the risk of adding more costs to the situation ,there will be contact by many ,the lung and skin precautions need to be addressed . It is not my intent to throw a stick in the spokes ,but if I were so inclined to get involved in any capacity I'd need to know,as should everyone.

Wayne parsons
Posted by Wayne parsons
April 05, 2009 7:43 PM

Randy: You make a good point. I am active in the green building movement and a major concern when looking at a green product is how do you dispose of it eventually and what impact does it have on the environment. Many energy devices for instance save electricity but they pollute the environment when disposed of after their use. Few controls exist to deal with disposal of old construction materials. We create toxic waste dumps with many commonly used materials. Are you familiar with LEED? It attempts to encourage better practices. But we can't make a family breathe toxic fumes in their home either can we?

Brad
Posted by Brad
April 11, 2009 6:42 PM

Wayne,
I live in Hawaii and was wondering how you are able to make the claim that we do not have a Chinese drywall problem here when on other websites, I have seen Hawaii listed as a problem area? Thanks for the info!

Wayne ParsonsInjuryBoard Attorney Member
Posted by Wayne Parsons
April 11, 2009 6:51 PM

Brad: I am unaware of any complaints about problems in Hawaii. Correct me if I am wrong. Have you heard of Hawaii residents having the noxious smells from Chinese drywall? Maybe I missed something?

Brad
Posted by Brad
April 11, 2009 7:00 PM

Was looking for info on the web and ran across this:
More ...

I have not heard of any complaints in Hawaii yet but according to this article, the products apparently entered our ports. I am curious since I had a home built in 2007, going to check the drywall backing when I get home!

Wayne ParsonsInjuryBoard Attorney Member
Posted by Wayne Parsons
April 11, 2009 7:02 PM

You might want to see if you can smell the sulfurous odor. Let me know if you find anything.

larry
Posted by larry
April 16, 2009 9:01 AM

I have Chinese drywall, I’m located in South Florida I started a website helpchinesedrywall.com to gather as many facts about the problem that is devastating families around the country.

Wayne ParsonsInjuryBoard Attorney Member
Posted by Wayne Parsons
April 16, 2009 2:47 PM

Thanks Larry. Let's get the word out about your help website: More ...

I just went to the website and it is excellent. Good work!

Rob Scott
Posted by Rob Scott
April 22, 2009 1:12 PM

Does anyone know of a recycling stream for mgo board scraps

Rob Scott
Posted by Rob Scott
April 22, 2009 1:12 PM

Does anyone know of a recycling stream for mgo board scraps

Comments for this article are closed.

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