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Tuesday, December 6, 2016

Replacement Windows Appointment Scheduled Wednesday

Home-Center

Window-Replacement

The hot summer heat was brutal on many homes. Keep the cool air out as we enter the chilly months.
 
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Install glass doors to close off your fireplace. Those doors keep cold air from coming down into your house and your warm air from escaping up through the chimney. If you use your fireplace, make sure you close the flue when you re finished. Insulate your attic door. You can buy covers for attic staircases or openings. They re typically easy to install and remove, and they ll help you reduce energy costs year round. Cover your windows. If you don t have storm windows, you can create your own DIY storm window with a window insulation kit. Inside your house, use insulated drapes. Buy insulated garage and exterior doors. The garage doors that come with most homes aren t insulated. An alternative to replacing exterior doors is to add a storm door.

Money aside, there also is something to be said for sitting by a warm fire on a cold winter nightand not feeling the icy chill from drafty windows on your neck. s it a bad idea to install windows in the winter time Not necessarily. Replacing windows in extreme temperatures can be very difficult unless you use a high quality vinyl. Low quality vinyl can expand and warp slightly in very cold or hot weather, but not all vinyl is created equal. The number that will help you the most when looking at a window to see if it is susceptible to the conditions is the Solar Heat Gain Coefficient (SHGC). It is literally on every window label in the United States. The NFRC is responsible for regulating these labels. a SHGC is expressed between 0 and 1, the lower the number the better.

You just bought a home, and now that the weather is cooler, you are feeling every draft. You re already dealing with mortgage payments, so should you invest in window upgrades as well Replacing windows carries a large billsome estimates range from $8,000 to $24,000, depending on your house as well as the types of windows and casements you invest in. It s common knowledge that replacing old, drafty windows with modern energy savers will cut your energy bill, but will that alone cover a five figure investment We scoured reports and spoke with Kerry Haglund of the Efficient Windows Collaborative (they released a window selection tool app for mobile this fall) to help with these decisions.

 
 
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