Morning All,
One of the jobs on the job list is having a crack at putting double glazed sealed units into one of our existing sash windows. With a spare hour (turned into four, oops) on the weekend I got stuck in and pulled one apart! From my investigations so far I'm pretty sure it will workout, the sashes are good and deep with spare depth to route out a deeper (rebate?) for the new sealed unit to sit in. Going from a 6mm single pane to a 4/6/4 unit the extra mass wont be too much to balance with a few extra weights.
However, I've a couple of specific questions that I was hoping some of you could advise on.
1. Seal pile thickness: I'm assuming that ideally you select the pile depth depending on the gap you have. Having stripped down my windows the sashes are very tight between the beads. For the internal sash I can adjust the staff bead to give me the correct fitting. However for the outer sash that is between the parting bead and the outer edge of the window I'm concerned that the sash with the pile seal will be too tight. do I need to worry about this, and/or try to adjust the sash/window frame to give a looser fit?
2.Meeting Rail: The meeting rails of the upper and lower sashes are profiled to interlock, see image at end, they seem to fit together well but I doubt they will be as wind tight as the brush pile. I'm loath to plane them off and fit a pile seal as they are original to the window and very nicely done! Any thoughts on how I could improve the draft 'proofness' of them?
3. Pulleys 1: When I was taking the window apart I noticed the pulley was running but not very smoothly. I didn't have time to investigate the pulley before I temporarily refitted the window. I'm about to order new beads/cords etc. and wondering if the old pulleys are serviceable or should I be adding some to the order?
4. Pulleys 2: Only the top sash is counter weighted. With the window apart I could see that there had never been pulleys installed for the bottom sash, nor has the bottom sash any rebate for cord attachment (easy to see as the top sash has amazing cord rebates with a large screw at the centre, the cord end is then spliced into a eye that fits over the screwhead). Does anyone have any info on why only the top sash would be counterbalanced? BTW the window is in the kitchen on the ground floor in a 1875 Scottish house.
5. DGU Fitting: I'm planning to leave a 2mm gap around the sealed unit and install spacers at the base. I've read about different options to fit the unit.
- Glazing tape, timber beads and a drained bottom rebate.
- Fully bedded, un-drained low mod silicone with external timber bead.
It seems to me there is a movement from the first option to the latter, driven by improved silicone technology facilitating what is a much easier install. I will check with the sealed unit supplier that their edge seal is compatible. So I'm planning to go the second option, does that seem sensible or have i got it all a-about-face?
Thanks Fitz.
PS. Not sure if this should have been in general woodworking or another forum, feel free to move if required
One of the jobs on the job list is having a crack at putting double glazed sealed units into one of our existing sash windows. With a spare hour (turned into four, oops) on the weekend I got stuck in and pulled one apart! From my investigations so far I'm pretty sure it will workout, the sashes are good and deep with spare depth to route out a deeper (rebate?) for the new sealed unit to sit in. Going from a 6mm single pane to a 4/6/4 unit the extra mass wont be too much to balance with a few extra weights.
However, I've a couple of specific questions that I was hoping some of you could advise on.
1. Seal pile thickness: I'm assuming that ideally you select the pile depth depending on the gap you have. Having stripped down my windows the sashes are very tight between the beads. For the internal sash I can adjust the staff bead to give me the correct fitting. However for the outer sash that is between the parting bead and the outer edge of the window I'm concerned that the sash with the pile seal will be too tight. do I need to worry about this, and/or try to adjust the sash/window frame to give a looser fit?
2.Meeting Rail: The meeting rails of the upper and lower sashes are profiled to interlock, see image at end, they seem to fit together well but I doubt they will be as wind tight as the brush pile. I'm loath to plane them off and fit a pile seal as they are original to the window and very nicely done! Any thoughts on how I could improve the draft 'proofness' of them?
3. Pulleys 1: When I was taking the window apart I noticed the pulley was running but not very smoothly. I didn't have time to investigate the pulley before I temporarily refitted the window. I'm about to order new beads/cords etc. and wondering if the old pulleys are serviceable or should I be adding some to the order?
4. Pulleys 2: Only the top sash is counter weighted. With the window apart I could see that there had never been pulleys installed for the bottom sash, nor has the bottom sash any rebate for cord attachment (easy to see as the top sash has amazing cord rebates with a large screw at the centre, the cord end is then spliced into a eye that fits over the screwhead). Does anyone have any info on why only the top sash would be counterbalanced? BTW the window is in the kitchen on the ground floor in a 1875 Scottish house.
5. DGU Fitting: I'm planning to leave a 2mm gap around the sealed unit and install spacers at the base. I've read about different options to fit the unit.
- Glazing tape, timber beads and a drained bottom rebate.
- Fully bedded, un-drained low mod silicone with external timber bead.
It seems to me there is a movement from the first option to the latter, driven by improved silicone technology facilitating what is a much easier install. I will check with the sealed unit supplier that their edge seal is compatible. So I'm planning to go the second option, does that seem sensible or have i got it all a-about-face?
Thanks Fitz.
PS. Not sure if this should have been in general woodworking or another forum, feel free to move if required