Selecting the appropriate frame style when installing new windows
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Final week, I told you how to measure for your vinyl replacement windows when replacing aluminum windows. Now that you are ready to order your new vinyl replacement windows, we need to have to talk about the diverse frame style options available. In most of the country your choices are restricted to either new construction or replacement frames. New construction frames come with a nailing fin to attach the frame to the studs in the course of the construction of the new home. The replacement frame is basically the new construction frame minus the nailing fin.
But in the west, where stucco houses are common, manufacturers came up with a third kind of frame known as a retrofit frame. The retrofit frame has a fin about two inches wide, positioned flush with the outside face of the window. This is the best option when replacing old windows, but not all jobs will accomodate a retrofit frame application. So let's discuss how to figure out which frame is going to operate for you.
If you have a stucco exterior, retrofit is the way to go. You install the new window from the outside, and the flush fin covers the old aluminum frame that you are going to leave in location. Then you screw the new window in employing deck screws through the side channels as nicely as the best header. We will get into much more detail on the actual installation in a future report. If you have a stucco exterior, but there is a wood trim about the opening of the window where the flush fin would normally go, you can nevertheless use the retrofit style frame. You would require to get rid of the wood surrounding the opening, install the retrofit window, then acquire and install new wood trim. The old trim will no longer fit considering that the retrofit window frame dimensions will be bigger in width and height than the old window frame. Another solution is to install the retrofit fin on best of the wood trim. You can do this as extended as the depth from the face of the wood trim to the point in the home of the innermost portion of the old aluminum frame is much less than three inches deep. The cause is due to holy water sprinkler the fact a good quality retrofit window will have a 3 inch frame depth from the back of the flush fin to the innermost part of the frame. That innermost element wants to be additional into the house than the innermost part of the aluminum frame so that the aluminum frame will be hidden right after we candlelight service candles apply the inside trim. What if you have brick around the window openings? Or siding? Then what? Well, if you can install the window against the face of the brick or siding and nevertheless have the innermost component of the vinyl frame be additional into the property than the old frame, then you can use the retrofit style frame. If not, then you have to use the replacement style frame,then use trim to finish the outside. If you are in a position to get a retrofit frame with a relatively thin fin, you can also trim down the fins so the window fits in between the brick or wood. That would eradicate the need to have to trim out the outside. Some producers of retrofit frames will have grooves in the back of the retrofit fins. You basically run a utility knife in the groove until you are in a position to break off that piece of the fin.
The primary point to don't forget when determining regardless of whether or not to use a retrofit frame or a common replacement frame is that in order to use the retrofit frame there wants to be praying hands much less than three inches from the outside point exactly where the flush fin will rest to the inside point in the room where the old frame ends. If it really is less than 3 inches, go with the retro, a lot more than three inches, use the replacement frame and add trim to the outside in lieu of the flush fin.
Next week I am going to clarify the procedure of removing the old aluminum window.