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-   -   Hardieplank or vinyl siding.. (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/60652-hardieplank-vinyl-siding.html)

ROBMURR July 22nd 04 04:31 PM

Hardieplank or vinyl siding..
 
Currently have LP siding that is deteriorating after 10 years.
I installed it and about 1/2 of it is bad.
Want to either replace the damaged sections with hardieplank
and repaint or do the whole house in vinyl...I know putting the
old LP stuff up was hard up high due to weight but I know the
hardie plank weighs a ton!

I have helped on a vinyl install before and was not hard and the
materials were lightweight and do not need painting.
some neighbors have vinyl 15 years old and looks fine still.
Newer vinyl designs seem to look better than theirs.
I think I am answering my own question here and leaning towards
the vinyl solution. But any comments welcome..
Rob

Joseph Meehan July 22nd 04 06:10 PM

Hardieplank or vinyl siding..
 
ROBMURR wrote:
Currently have LP siding that is deteriorating after 10 years.
I installed it and about 1/2 of it is bad.
Want to either replace the damaged sections with hardieplank
and repaint or do the whole house in vinyl...I know putting the
old LP stuff up was hard up high due to weight but I know the
hardie plank weighs a ton!

I have helped on a vinyl install before and was not hard and the
materials were lightweight and do not need painting.
some neighbors have vinyl 15 years old and looks fine still.
Newer vinyl designs seem to look better than theirs.
I think I am answering my own question here and leaning towards
the vinyl solution. But any comments welcome..
Rob


Today's better vinyls are not bad, but they do tend to be noisy in wind.
They rattle.

--
Joseph E. Meehan

26 + 6 = 1 It's Irish Math




Art July 22nd 04 07:08 PM

Hardieplank or vinyl siding..
 
I would think that Hardiplank is much more expensive and that should be a
consideration too.


"ROBMURR" wrote in message
...
Currently have LP siding that is deteriorating after 10 years.
I installed it and about 1/2 of it is bad.
Want to either replace the damaged sections with hardieplank
and repaint or do the whole house in vinyl...I know putting the
old LP stuff up was hard up high due to weight but I know the
hardie plank weighs a ton!

I have helped on a vinyl install before and was not hard and the
materials were lightweight and do not need painting.
some neighbors have vinyl 15 years old and looks fine still.
Newer vinyl designs seem to look better than theirs.
I think I am answering my own question here and leaning towards
the vinyl solution. But any comments welcome..
Rob




Doug Boulter July 23rd 04 02:31 AM

Hardieplank or vinyl siding..
 
(ROBMURR) wrote on 22 Jul 2004:

I think I am answering my own question here and leaning towards
the vinyl solution. But any comments welcome..


Well, do you want siding that is fireproof, structural, and looks
decent? Or do you want vinyl?

--
Doug Boulter

To reply by e-mail, remove the obvious word from the e-mail address

David Wilkinson July 23rd 04 03:08 AM

Hardieplank or vinyl siding..
 
(ROBMURR) wrote in news:20040722113129.04966.00001403@mb-
m24.aol.com:

Currently have LP siding that is deteriorating after 10 years.
I installed it and about 1/2 of it is bad.
Want to either replace the damaged sections with hardieplank
and repaint or do the whole house in vinyl...I know putting the
old LP stuff up was hard up high due to weight but I know the
hardie plank weighs a ton!

I have helped on a vinyl install before and was not hard and the
materials were lightweight and do not need painting.
some neighbors have vinyl 15 years old and looks fine still.
Newer vinyl designs seem to look better than theirs.
I think I am answering my own question here and leaning towards
the vinyl solution. But any comments welcome..
Rob


I've removed vinyl and aluminum on numerous houses when doing renovations
and remodeling. Without fail, major sections of the wood (old siding and
framing) beneath the outer siding was severely rotted. Vinyl and aluminum
work OK on new installations but typically not too well over existing
siding.

Tom Baker July 23rd 04 11:49 AM

Hardieplank or vinyl siding..
 
David Wilkinson wrote in message . 206...
(ROBMURR) wrote in news:20040722113129.04966.00001403@mb-
m24.aol.com:

Currently have LP siding that is deteriorating after 10 years.
I installed it and about 1/2 of it is bad.
Want to either replace the damaged sections with hardieplank
and repaint or do the whole house in vinyl...I know putting the
old LP stuff up was hard up high due to weight but I know the
hardie plank weighs a ton!

I have helped on a vinyl install before and was not hard and the
materials were lightweight and do not need painting.
some neighbors have vinyl 15 years old and looks fine still.
Newer vinyl designs seem to look better than theirs.
I think I am answering my own question here and leaning towards
the vinyl solution. But any comments welcome..
Rob


I've removed vinyl and aluminum on numerous houses when doing renovations
and remodeling. Without fail, major sections of the wood (old siding and
framing) beneath the outer siding was severely rotted. Vinyl and aluminum
work OK on new installations but typically not too well over existing
siding.


My experience matches this in part.
I worked with a builder on a house that had original siding removed and vinyl added.
Flashing around windows and #15 felt was damaged.
OSB sheathing was deteriorated because vinyl siding let weather through.
TB

Bailey July 28th 04 12:10 PM

Hardieplank or vinyl siding..
 
On 22 Jul 2004 15:31:29 GMT, (ROBMURR) typed:

Currently have LP siding that is deteriorating after 10 years.
I installed it and about 1/2 of it is bad.
Want to either replace the damaged sections with hardieplank
and repaint or do the whole house in vinyl...I know putting the
old LP stuff up was hard up high due to weight but I know the
hardie plank weighs a ton!

I have helped on a vinyl install before and was not hard and the
materials were lightweight and do not need painting.
some neighbors have vinyl 15 years old and looks fine still.
Newer vinyl designs seem to look better than theirs.
I think I am answering my own question here and leaning towards
the vinyl solution. But any comments welcome..
Rob


I'm adding a third floor to my house, which is on Long Island Sound.
It currently has cedar lap siding. I was debating all the choices
and decided on pre-finished Hardiplank. The 30-to-50 year warranty
on the siding and 15 year warranty on the finish sealed the deal for
me. There may have been improvements made in vinyl over the years,
but it still looks like crapola to me.

--
Jeff Bailey

www.baileyjs.com

Did you know "gullible" is not in the dictionary?


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