Clark1961
Touchdown! Greaser!
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- Jun 7, 2008
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So I've got this little siding project: replace vinyl siding damaged by hailstorm.
Gotta get rid of the vinyl. It's low maintenance and looks like it belongs in suburbia but it really sucks in terms of being weather tight and golf ball sized hail knocks holes in it.
Looked at options and decided to go with composite siding. Yup, sawdust and glue. Good impact resistance. Looks better than vinyl with several options. Wall will be covered with 16" x 16' boards with 1" overlap. Decent weather seal. Gable end will be a staggered shake style board that is 15" x 4'. Easy enough to work with.
Got the wall covered with mostly few worries. Noticed that the carpenters who built the house in 64 were inconsistent on 16" spacing. The way I learned 16" spacing was you started on one end and made damn sure there was a stud or nailer every 16" no matter what else was going on. Windows and doors did not interrupt the basic pattern. Might require a few extra sticks but ya never, never, never, never restart the pattern.
Well these guys restarted the pattern at windows. In this case 16" spacing meant 16" spacing until something is cut into the wall then the 16" restarts at the last doubler of that interruption and good luck on spacing under the cut. Great. Love it. Make up stud spacing as ya go along. Freakin' idiots.
It was obvious that the sheathers at the time didn't know what the framers were doing as there were more than a few holes knocked in the sheathing by trying to drive nails where there was no stud. Or maybe the sheathers were drunk. Crappy work since they didn't repair the holes they made. I sealed the holes.
Anyway started working on the gable end. Siding material spec calls for nailing 16" o.c. Gable end was built with framing at 24" o.c. Crap. Gotta put nailers in. Also notice the soffit covers the framing entirely. The old siding was floating where it butted the soffit. Huge no-no in my book. Gotta add nailers to the rafter framing to eliminate the float. Double crap.
Checked a few measurements and cut all my nailers. Didn't check the 24" o.c. spacing all the way out. Big mistake. The rafter truss builders used 24" o.c. except where they didn't. Have to crawl down from attic to recut 2 pieces because the morons of 50 years ago couldn't be consistent on frame spacing.
When I worked on framing crews we knew that we'd catch hell (and have to pay for material costs or repairs) if the spacing was inconsistent. I guess that 50 years ago folks weren't smart enough to plan ahead just a little bit. Or maybe they thought the houses wouldn't last any longer than the siding. Or maybe they didn't think.
I won't even go into the lack of weather sealing on either the original construction or by the crew that did the vinyl siding. I muttered under my breath that it's good thing it's a desert here and added housewrap, window tape, and window flashing.
TLR House framing has to use consistent stud spacing so anyone who works on the house after the framing crew can do their job correctly.
Gotta get rid of the vinyl. It's low maintenance and looks like it belongs in suburbia but it really sucks in terms of being weather tight and golf ball sized hail knocks holes in it.
Looked at options and decided to go with composite siding. Yup, sawdust and glue. Good impact resistance. Looks better than vinyl with several options. Wall will be covered with 16" x 16' boards with 1" overlap. Decent weather seal. Gable end will be a staggered shake style board that is 15" x 4'. Easy enough to work with.
Got the wall covered with mostly few worries. Noticed that the carpenters who built the house in 64 were inconsistent on 16" spacing. The way I learned 16" spacing was you started on one end and made damn sure there was a stud or nailer every 16" no matter what else was going on. Windows and doors did not interrupt the basic pattern. Might require a few extra sticks but ya never, never, never, never restart the pattern.
Well these guys restarted the pattern at windows. In this case 16" spacing meant 16" spacing until something is cut into the wall then the 16" restarts at the last doubler of that interruption and good luck on spacing under the cut. Great. Love it. Make up stud spacing as ya go along. Freakin' idiots.
It was obvious that the sheathers at the time didn't know what the framers were doing as there were more than a few holes knocked in the sheathing by trying to drive nails where there was no stud. Or maybe the sheathers were drunk. Crappy work since they didn't repair the holes they made. I sealed the holes.
Anyway started working on the gable end. Siding material spec calls for nailing 16" o.c. Gable end was built with framing at 24" o.c. Crap. Gotta put nailers in. Also notice the soffit covers the framing entirely. The old siding was floating where it butted the soffit. Huge no-no in my book. Gotta add nailers to the rafter framing to eliminate the float. Double crap.
Checked a few measurements and cut all my nailers. Didn't check the 24" o.c. spacing all the way out. Big mistake. The rafter truss builders used 24" o.c. except where they didn't. Have to crawl down from attic to recut 2 pieces because the morons of 50 years ago couldn't be consistent on frame spacing.
When I worked on framing crews we knew that we'd catch hell (and have to pay for material costs or repairs) if the spacing was inconsistent. I guess that 50 years ago folks weren't smart enough to plan ahead just a little bit. Or maybe they thought the houses wouldn't last any longer than the siding. Or maybe they didn't think.
I won't even go into the lack of weather sealing on either the original construction or by the crew that did the vinyl siding. I muttered under my breath that it's good thing it's a desert here and added housewrap, window tape, and window flashing.
TLR House framing has to use consistent stud spacing so anyone who works on the house after the framing crew can do their job correctly.