this post was submitted on 12 Jun 2023
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Home Improvement ๐Ÿ‘ท

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[โ€“] Gordon@lemmy.world 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

We rented a house where the owner decided to replace all the old metal fame single pane windows with new high quality double pane windows.

He spent something like $30,000 on all the windows and installation.

Didn't notice any difference.

Like, the HVAC bill was basically the same, and the noise was basically the same.

We may have saved $5-10/mo. on power but that is simply not worth it.

[โ€“] sagittarie@lemmy.world 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

The key with windows is reducing your cost. I too received a quote for $30-40k back in the day... so I did it myself with vinyl replacements (double pane, argon, etc). Ended up spending only a few thousand total for the whole house, I know I did a better job than the local contractor because I spent my time and did it right.

We had a massive comfort difference due to the old windows being extremely drafty (1960's original wood single-pane). In my opinion that's the biggest benefit. We also were able to remove our storm windows, so improved exterior visibility, reduced cleaning, and improved curb appeal in my opinion.

Energy-savings, yeah not so much unless you DIY like I did to keep the cost down.

[โ€“] tst123@lemmy.world 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

How difficult was it to DIY?

[โ€“] sagittarie@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago

It's honestly really easy. The internet makes it out to be so much scarier than it is. The windows even come with instructions, lol.

  1. Remove the sash bead with a knife and prybar carefully.
  2. Remove your panes, usually with double toggles, or pushing to the side if it's spring-loaded on one side.
  3. Remove any additional wood stops or brackets in the windows frame except for the very outer one at top.
  4. Fix any rotten wood, paint the sill.
  5. If you want an A+ on the install, also add an adhesive/tar waterproofing strip on the bottom third of the window frame.
  6. Insert the window, and shims on the sides where the screws go.
  7. Screw the window in.
  8. Adjust tightness to ensure smooth operation, fiddle with shims as-needed.
  9. Trim shims and spray-foam the cracks.
  10. Trim off spray-foam once dry.
  11. Re-attach sash bead and caulk/sand/paint.
  12. Caulk exterior and anything else you can find.

Some windows will have additional steps like drilling small weep holes on the outside corners and stuff, but it's just a "read the instructions" thing.