Awning: windows are hinged at the top and open outward.
Bay Window: his style projects out from the wall; a center window parallel to the wall
is flanked by two windows attached at an angle, usually casement or double-hung styles.
Box bays have side windows at a 90-degree angle.
Board and Batten: A style in which a narrow strip of siding appears to cover the seam
between two wider boards. Board and batten siding is installed vertically.
Bow Window: A bow window projects like a bay but has more than three sections that join
to form a gentle curve. Center windows are generally fixed; side sashes are typically
casement windows.
Box Vents: vents on the pitch of a roof that come out horizontally from the attic.
Butt: An exposed end of a shingle, larger than others.
Casement: windows are hinged at the sides.
Drip edge: A metal strip that runs along the edge of the roof that sheds water away from
eves or siding.
Dormer: A window set vertically into a small gable projecting from a sloping roof.
Eave: The underside of the house wall that is visible, found on sloped roofs.
Exposure: The exposed end of a shingle that sticks out from your roof.
Fascia: The front facing surface of trim on a house above the soffit but below the roof
line.
Flashing: Metal shields that keep water out of intersections of your roof as well as
joints or valleys.
Gable Vent: slated vent usually found near attics at the top of the home.
Grain: The embossed pattern pressed into the vinyl, simulating wood grain or texture.
Granular Deterioration: the wearing away of the shingle by weather or sunlight.
Hopper: windows are hinged at the bottom and open inward.
Ice & Water Shields: prevent leaks and ice dams, which can wreak havoc on a home's
roofing and walls.
Joist: Any of a number of small, parallel beams of timber, steel, reinforced concrete,
etc., for supporting floors, ceilings, or the like.
Leaf Guards or Gutter Guards: a covering that keeps debris out of the gutter preventing
blockage.
Louvers: A framed opening, as in a wall, door, or window, fitted with fixed or movable
horizontal slats for admitting air and light and shedding rain.
Low E Glass: is a coating applied to a thermal window that reflects radiant heat. In the
winter time when you are heating your home, the radiant heat bounces off your windows
and back into your home. Equally important, radiant heat from the sun in the summer time
bounces off your windows as well.
Nail Hem: The top portion of a vinyl siding panel. It has oblong horizontal slits into
which the installer nails the siding.
OSB: Oriented Strand Board, made from wood ground into thin wood strands. These strands
are mixed with wax and adhesive and then hot pressed. Approximately 50 layers of strands
make one sheet of OSB.
Pitch: : The slope/angle of your roof, this is determined by a ratio of rise to
distance.
Positive Lock: Positive Lock ensures that the panels can be locked together, but can
also easily slide back and forth for ease in installation. This ensures that the panels
stay permanently affixed during adverse weather.
Profiles: The actual siding panels are called profiles. Some commonly sized profiles are
D4, D5 and Dutchlap.
Roof Deck: The roof deck is the structural member upon which the roofing material
(shingles or tiles) are installed. The roof deck is typically constructed of plywood,
tongue-and-groove boards, or hardboard.
Shadow Line: The shadow cast by the sun on the butt edge, making the panel look deeper
from a distance. Each vinyl siding profile has its own distinctive shadow line.
Shakes: a shingle or clapboard formed by splitting a short log into a number of tapered
radial sections with a hatchet.
Slider: Both sashes slide horizontally in a double-sliding window. Only one sash slides
in a single-sliding window.
Soffit Vent: Air vents that are flush with the ceiling or wall ventilation system
indoors.
Square: A measurement of roof area that equals 100 square feet (an area 10' by 10').
Rafters: The framework that holds up the roof deck and roofing materials.
Rake: The sloped edge of a roof over a wall.
Ridge: The peak where two sloped roof sections meet.
Ridge Vents: A vent mounted along the entire ridge line of the roof to allow the passage
of air through the attic or cathedral ceiling.
Truss: A roof system that distributes weight to the ceiling joist.
Turbine Vent: A powered vent that circulates air up and out of the home.
Under Layments: Roofing paper that has been impregnated with asphalt. This creates a
water proof barrier between other materials and the roof deck.
Valley: The angle formed where two sloping roof surfaces intersect.
Weep Hole: A small hole in the bottom butt edge of the vinyl siding panel, allowing
condensation to escape. |