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 Scott Flynn, Flynner Homes
Scott Flynn
(208) 867-4587
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Invaluable Siders
Main / Building Value into Boise Real Estate  

Does your sider think like water?

I can’t stress enough the importance of your subcontractors to be able to think beyond just the installation of their product. Subs need to be thinking about how their work will affect the others that are still to follow and to visualize the end product. They need to be as considerate as possible to the subcontractors that follow them, even if it is as simple as sweeping up after them selves. 

 
But what about when Mother Nature follows your subcontractor’s work, such as a sider? This is when thinking beyond just making it look good is extremely important to insure that Mother Nature does not penetrate the house envelope.  My sider, being a former roofer, quoted the phase “as siders we think like water “. Just think how critical this is to the integrity of the home. Marty, my sider, protects the home from water penetration by making sure all doors, belly bands, and moldings are protected from water penetration by either using a metal drip edge or by sloping the trim details so that water sheds away from the structure. Even though this may seem like a “no brainer” way to think, not all do.
 
Does your sider think like water? If you want one that does, contact Marty Harrell of Marty Harrell Construction at 208-713-1498.                    
 
Thank you Marty for going the extra mile and adding increased durability into all of my homes.
 
Scott Flynn
Posted by Scott Flynn at 1/22/2008 11:13 AM Permalink | Trackback
Comments (1)
Re:Invaluable Siders
great comments, but we also need to stress the need for the drainage plane behind the cladding (sidding, stone, etc) we can not build a water tight structure, and siding is the fist line of defense, but not the last. make sure you use a bulk water barrier ( building wrap) properly flash the openings into the WRB (weather restant barrier -building wrap) and flash correctly. the most common mistake I see on cladding details is the missing kicker flashing at the roof to wall intersection that dirrect the water away from the siding and into (hopefully) a gutter, that again takes the water away from the home, on a proper overhand that again carries water away from the home. So while siging is important, the are we really need to concern ourselves with is the drainage plane (this is behind the siding or cladding) Get this detail right and you have succeeded where most fail. Great comment Scott.
Posted by Tad Duby on 1/26/2008 11:32 AM
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