ToolUsingAnimal
Well-known member
This is kind of garage related, because I was going to have this guy do my garage too. Now I'm not so sure
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We hired a contractor to remove the cedar shakes and ancient windows from our house and replace them with cedar-looking vinyl siding and vinyl new construction windows. He's done a great job so far with the siding, but the windows, not so sure. Not knowing anything about windows, I didn't look too much into it until the first time it rained with the new ones. There was no siding on the back of the house, and there's one window back there with no eaves covering it that water was coming into. The problem was that there was a patch above the window with no housewrap covering it, and water was getting under it.
He has the housewrap coming in every side of the window, with all four sides taped outside. All the windows are like this:
but none of them had any leaks, thanks to my houses' huge eaves. Even during the hurricane, all the other windows were fine. I eventually found this EPA article:
http://www.epa.gov/indoorairplus/technical/moisture/1_6.html
That way makes more sense to me. The instructions from the window manufacturer, the housewrap manufacturer, and the tape manufacturer all match it. Hell, there are instructions on the sticker on every window that show this method. Is this a big enough deal to talk with the contractor about?
.We hired a contractor to remove the cedar shakes and ancient windows from our house and replace them with cedar-looking vinyl siding and vinyl new construction windows. He's done a great job so far with the siding, but the windows, not so sure. Not knowing anything about windows, I didn't look too much into it until the first time it rained with the new ones. There was no siding on the back of the house, and there's one window back there with no eaves covering it that water was coming into. The problem was that there was a patch above the window with no housewrap covering it, and water was getting under it.
He has the housewrap coming in every side of the window, with all four sides taped outside. All the windows are like this:
but none of them had any leaks, thanks to my houses' huge eaves. Even during the hurricane, all the other windows were fine. I eventually found this EPA article:
http://www.epa.gov/indoorairplus/technical/moisture/1_6.html
That way makes more sense to me. The instructions from the window manufacturer, the housewrap manufacturer, and the tape manufacturer all match it. Hell, there are instructions on the sticker on every window that show this method. Is this a big enough deal to talk with the contractor about?

. Now he's sided about half the house since then, but if he's got to peel some off for him to do it right, oh well.