It is recommended to start at the earliest post and proceed chronologically.
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January 19, 2015
January 16, 2015
Lower Fascia
Drywall is scheduled for Monday, so it was high time to install the fascia boards on the lower canopies. (It forms the edge to contain the soffit drywall)
January 13, 2015
The Therminator
What "The Predator" sees |
January 12, 2015
January 11, 2015
For the Birds
January 07, 2015
January 03, 2015
December 24, 2014
Happy Holidays to All!
Siding Progress Report
Siding continues, with excellent results so far.
Also seen here, the weather cooperated and I added the bottom piece of steel to the breakfast nook, completing the box. The red/white plastic is covering the fresh primer on the welds.
Also seen here, the weather cooperated and I added the bottom piece of steel to the breakfast nook, completing the box. The red/white plastic is covering the fresh primer on the welds.
Roof is Finally Done! Wait. Recall that.
The long tale of the roof (not counting gutters) almost came to conclusion yesterday. They finally came back with the last remaining skylight and a missing piece of flashing. All was installed, and we thought we were finally complete with our lid.
Last night it rained good and hard.
This morning, there was a small drip coming from the new skylight.
Phbbt.
Last night it rained good and hard.
This morning, there was a small drip coming from the new skylight.
Phbbt.
The Sad Tale of the Garage Siding
Turns out the subcontractor kinda forgot to include the garage furring in his bid. (It was mentioned in the work summary, but not in the line-items used to figure the costs.)
While a shady contractor might say something like this to try and line their pockets, I decided that our guy was telling the truth.
Not having any additional money to throw at this issue (for furring and labor), and not being one to punish honest mistakes, our compromise is to use this "drainwrap" weather resistant barrier to achieve at least a minimal amount of ventilation.
This brand uses a matrix of raised plastic nubbins to hold the back of the siding not quite 1/16" of an inch off the WRB. This is one of the better alternatives of drainwrap out there; some just have a wrinkly surface texture as their "drainage plane".
Better than nothing, I am still skeptical of the extent of effectiveness. Extensive testing led to the National Building Code of Canada adopting a rainscreen requirement with a 10mm (over 1/4") space. That said, a series of tests by John Straube, PhD does show that a gap as small as 1mm (about what this is) still makes a difference.
We'll now have a laboratory on site to see how it performs over the years.
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