giglet: (Default)
[personal profile] giglet posting in [community profile] fandom_joints
Hi everyone! This community has been quiet for a long time, but that doesn't mean we haven't been doing stuff. Most recently, I pulled a broken mortis lock out of a 100-year-old door, faffed around for a while before realizing I was never going to replace it with another mortis lock, then filled in the hole with wood and Bondo before installing new doorknobs. I am pretty pleased with the end product.

But I wanted to talk about windows today. (The ones in your house's walls, not the electronic ones.) I love my 100-year-old house's equally old double-hung windows, and I have no desire to replace them. However, I would really really like to improve their efficiency. I also have limited energy, time, and money to devote to the project, and October (when the temps start dropping seriously) is looming.

Over the years, I've done a number of small repairs on my windows, including fixing broken counterweights (and replacing cords with chain), removing old cracked glazing and replacing it, fixing or replacing misaligned locks and latches, and applying copper or plastic weatherstripping (poorly) to the relevant edges. (I'm lousy at weatherstripping. I'm not sure why. I'd be most likely to farm out this part of a job.)

Do we have any (other) old-window geeks here? If you have pointers towards information, I'd really appreciated it:

1) We have storm/screen windows that mostly work pretty well, but in a couple cases completely fail to stop the wind from passing through. I have heard (from a source of unknown quality) that this can be fixed by detaching them from the house, making sure the storm window frame is square, then re-attaching them to the house (probably drilling new holes). Does this sound reasonable? Are there other ways of fixing/renovating storm windows?

2) If I go to the trouble of insulating around the casing of the window, am I better served to do this before or after blowing insulation (probably cellulose) into the walls? Is fiberglass completely useless for this situation (which is what I suspect), or is there a better option than minimally-expanding Great Stuff?

3) If a cracked pane is otherwise in good shape (glazing is holding both pieces of glass in a single plane), can I get away with a cheap kludge of filling the crack with clear caulk?

Date: 2014-08-10 07:14 am (UTC)
sara: S (Default)
From: [personal profile] sara
The harm is, it's a bear to reverse, and it's not going to hold up for as long as the rest of the system, so sooner or later you're going to have to get in there and scrape all of it out so you can fix it right.

Better to fix it right the first time than make trouble for yourself down the road.

Profile

Fannish home owners, our homes, our repairs

August 2014

S M T W T F S
     12
345 6789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930
31      

Most Popular Tags

Page Summary

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jun. 6th, 2025 10:35 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios