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December 1, 2010 at 12:35 PM #634549December 2, 2010 at 7:16 AM #635809NotCrankyParticipant
Not all of us piggs are high end designer living types.. If the house it pretty ho hum in the first place a premium window upgrade job won’t make it a star or a good “investment”. I do think windows are as important. .I don’t know what kind of house the op has but he mentioned budget concerns.
I am not a fan of breaking stucco and the flashing and paper below on a 40 year old house. That paper is usually very fragile and getting a good ovelap between the old and the new gets fudged quite a bit. Not saying someone won’t do a good job, but they might not tell you if they don’t or can’t.
Some people might actually want to preserve the exterior facade for aesthetic reasons as well. In that case why rip it out if it is all sound?
December 2, 2010 at 7:16 AM #635491NotCrankyParticipantNot all of us piggs are high end designer living types.. If the house it pretty ho hum in the first place a premium window upgrade job won’t make it a star or a good “investment”. I do think windows are as important. .I don’t know what kind of house the op has but he mentioned budget concerns.
I am not a fan of breaking stucco and the flashing and paper below on a 40 year old house. That paper is usually very fragile and getting a good ovelap between the old and the new gets fudged quite a bit. Not saying someone won’t do a good job, but they might not tell you if they don’t or can’t.
Some people might actually want to preserve the exterior facade for aesthetic reasons as well. In that case why rip it out if it is all sound?
December 2, 2010 at 7:16 AM #634788NotCrankyParticipantNot all of us piggs are high end designer living types.. If the house it pretty ho hum in the first place a premium window upgrade job won’t make it a star or a good “investment”. I do think windows are as important. .I don’t know what kind of house the op has but he mentioned budget concerns.
I am not a fan of breaking stucco and the flashing and paper below on a 40 year old house. That paper is usually very fragile and getting a good ovelap between the old and the new gets fudged quite a bit. Not saying someone won’t do a good job, but they might not tell you if they don’t or can’t.
Some people might actually want to preserve the exterior facade for aesthetic reasons as well. In that case why rip it out if it is all sound?
December 2, 2010 at 7:16 AM #635362NotCrankyParticipantNot all of us piggs are high end designer living types.. If the house it pretty ho hum in the first place a premium window upgrade job won’t make it a star or a good “investment”. I do think windows are as important. .I don’t know what kind of house the op has but he mentioned budget concerns.
I am not a fan of breaking stucco and the flashing and paper below on a 40 year old house. That paper is usually very fragile and getting a good ovelap between the old and the new gets fudged quite a bit. Not saying someone won’t do a good job, but they might not tell you if they don’t or can’t.
Some people might actually want to preserve the exterior facade for aesthetic reasons as well. In that case why rip it out if it is all sound?
December 2, 2010 at 7:16 AM #634709NotCrankyParticipantNot all of us piggs are high end designer living types.. If the house it pretty ho hum in the first place a premium window upgrade job won’t make it a star or a good “investment”. I do think windows are as important. .I don’t know what kind of house the op has but he mentioned budget concerns.
I am not a fan of breaking stucco and the flashing and paper below on a 40 year old house. That paper is usually very fragile and getting a good ovelap between the old and the new gets fudged quite a bit. Not saying someone won’t do a good job, but they might not tell you if they don’t or can’t.
Some people might actually want to preserve the exterior facade for aesthetic reasons as well. In that case why rip it out if it is all sound?
December 2, 2010 at 8:37 AM #634808mike92104Participant[quote=Rustico]Not all of us piggs are high end designer living types.. If the house it pretty ho hum in the first place a premium window upgrade job won’t make it a star or a good “investment”. I do think windows are as important. .I don’t know what kind of house the op has but he mentioned budget concerns.
I am not a fan of breaking stucco and the flashing and paper below on a 40 year old house. That paper is usually very fragile and getting a good ovelap between the old and the new gets fudged quite a bit. Not saying someone won’t do a good job, but they might not tell you if they don’t or can’t.
Some people might actually want to preserve the exterior facade for aesthetic reasons as well. In that case why rip it out if it is all sound?[/quote]
That’s kind of my feeling. I think the replacements do more to preserve the original window frames, and don’t require cutting into the stucco. I also have the option of just putting the old sashes back in getting to the weights is a different matter). To narrow the scope of my question, does anybody have positive or negative experiences with particular brands of replacement windows other than feeling they are tacky.
December 2, 2010 at 8:37 AM #635382mike92104Participant[quote=Rustico]Not all of us piggs are high end designer living types.. If the house it pretty ho hum in the first place a premium window upgrade job won’t make it a star or a good “investment”. I do think windows are as important. .I don’t know what kind of house the op has but he mentioned budget concerns.
I am not a fan of breaking stucco and the flashing and paper below on a 40 year old house. That paper is usually very fragile and getting a good ovelap between the old and the new gets fudged quite a bit. Not saying someone won’t do a good job, but they might not tell you if they don’t or can’t.
Some people might actually want to preserve the exterior facade for aesthetic reasons as well. In that case why rip it out if it is all sound?[/quote]
That’s kind of my feeling. I think the replacements do more to preserve the original window frames, and don’t require cutting into the stucco. I also have the option of just putting the old sashes back in getting to the weights is a different matter). To narrow the scope of my question, does anybody have positive or negative experiences with particular brands of replacement windows other than feeling they are tacky.
December 2, 2010 at 8:37 AM #634729mike92104Participant[quote=Rustico]Not all of us piggs are high end designer living types.. If the house it pretty ho hum in the first place a premium window upgrade job won’t make it a star or a good “investment”. I do think windows are as important. .I don’t know what kind of house the op has but he mentioned budget concerns.
I am not a fan of breaking stucco and the flashing and paper below on a 40 year old house. That paper is usually very fragile and getting a good ovelap between the old and the new gets fudged quite a bit. Not saying someone won’t do a good job, but they might not tell you if they don’t or can’t.
Some people might actually want to preserve the exterior facade for aesthetic reasons as well. In that case why rip it out if it is all sound?[/quote]
That’s kind of my feeling. I think the replacements do more to preserve the original window frames, and don’t require cutting into the stucco. I also have the option of just putting the old sashes back in getting to the weights is a different matter). To narrow the scope of my question, does anybody have positive or negative experiences with particular brands of replacement windows other than feeling they are tacky.
December 2, 2010 at 8:37 AM #635511mike92104Participant[quote=Rustico]Not all of us piggs are high end designer living types.. If the house it pretty ho hum in the first place a premium window upgrade job won’t make it a star or a good “investment”. I do think windows are as important. .I don’t know what kind of house the op has but he mentioned budget concerns.
I am not a fan of breaking stucco and the flashing and paper below on a 40 year old house. That paper is usually very fragile and getting a good ovelap between the old and the new gets fudged quite a bit. Not saying someone won’t do a good job, but they might not tell you if they don’t or can’t.
Some people might actually want to preserve the exterior facade for aesthetic reasons as well. In that case why rip it out if it is all sound?[/quote]
That’s kind of my feeling. I think the replacements do more to preserve the original window frames, and don’t require cutting into the stucco. I also have the option of just putting the old sashes back in getting to the weights is a different matter). To narrow the scope of my question, does anybody have positive or negative experiences with particular brands of replacement windows other than feeling they are tacky.
December 2, 2010 at 8:37 AM #635829mike92104Participant[quote=Rustico]Not all of us piggs are high end designer living types.. If the house it pretty ho hum in the first place a premium window upgrade job won’t make it a star or a good “investment”. I do think windows are as important. .I don’t know what kind of house the op has but he mentioned budget concerns.
I am not a fan of breaking stucco and the flashing and paper below on a 40 year old house. That paper is usually very fragile and getting a good ovelap between the old and the new gets fudged quite a bit. Not saying someone won’t do a good job, but they might not tell you if they don’t or can’t.
Some people might actually want to preserve the exterior facade for aesthetic reasons as well. In that case why rip it out if it is all sound?[/quote]
That’s kind of my feeling. I think the replacements do more to preserve the original window frames, and don’t require cutting into the stucco. I also have the option of just putting the old sashes back in getting to the weights is a different matter). To narrow the scope of my question, does anybody have positive or negative experiences with particular brands of replacement windows other than feeling they are tacky.
December 2, 2010 at 10:09 AM #634839anParticipantI like my Simonton windows. They can be tilt out so you can clean the windows from the inside. I don’t mind replacement windows at all. Spend an additional $20 bucks to add molding to frame out the window and you won’t feel that you loss a few inches. It’ll make the windows look more expensive than actually spending a lot more money to rip out the old window frame.
December 2, 2010 at 10:09 AM #635412anParticipantI like my Simonton windows. They can be tilt out so you can clean the windows from the inside. I don’t mind replacement windows at all. Spend an additional $20 bucks to add molding to frame out the window and you won’t feel that you loss a few inches. It’ll make the windows look more expensive than actually spending a lot more money to rip out the old window frame.
December 2, 2010 at 10:09 AM #635859anParticipantI like my Simonton windows. They can be tilt out so you can clean the windows from the inside. I don’t mind replacement windows at all. Spend an additional $20 bucks to add molding to frame out the window and you won’t feel that you loss a few inches. It’ll make the windows look more expensive than actually spending a lot more money to rip out the old window frame.
December 2, 2010 at 10:09 AM #635540anParticipantI like my Simonton windows. They can be tilt out so you can clean the windows from the inside. I don’t mind replacement windows at all. Spend an additional $20 bucks to add molding to frame out the window and you won’t feel that you loss a few inches. It’ll make the windows look more expensive than actually spending a lot more money to rip out the old window frame.
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