Fabricating seamless gutters |
Not being gutter salespeople ourselves, we did a little research to see whether we'd actually found bogosity or Nicole had managed to educate us. It was the former, which we suspected based on the opening statement in Whitney's post:
"Gutters control roof drainage, keeping homes free of moist conditions that promote mold and fungi."
"Materials: Seamless and traditional gutters are made with some of the same materials: aluminum, vinyl, galvanized steel, stainless steel and cooper [sic]."Our sources say she's mostly right, except maybe about the "cooper" gutters. In truth, however, galvanized steel and aluminum appear to be the most common materials.
"Benefits: Traditional gutters, unlike most seamless gutters, can come fitted with expansion joints relieve stress [sic] in the joints experienced when the gutter expand and contract because of changes in the weather... Seamless gutters have joints only where the gutter has and [sic] angle or a downspout."Two points: first, it's not "changes in the weather," it's (seasonal) changes in temperature; and the so-called "expansion joints" are nothing more than roofing cement (and work just fine). Second, there are also joints at the end caps of seamless gutters.
"Disadvantages: Traditional gutters may weaken from the weight of snow and rain, sprouting leaks in the joints..."
The rest of Whitney's article is boilerplate reworded from a couple of online forums; pretty much what you might expect from a nail technician whose only experience with gutters is seeing them on a house. In other words, a typical Dumbass of the Day.
¹ The original has been deleted by Leaf Group, but can still be accessed using the Wayback machine at archive.org. Its URL was homesteady.com/about-6307731-seamless-vs--traditional-gutters.html
copyright © 2019-2022 scmrak
DD - GUTTERS
No comments:
Post a Comment