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dry rot in window sills
dry rot in window sills
Have to paint the outside of the house this year and I have started on the fiddly stuff like scraping and found 1/2 of the sills have some dry rot. Fortunately it is a single story house and I made a trip to buy wood hardener, putty, epoxy, and some cedar planking. So..... tomorrow morning before the rains start again I will see how deep it goes on the kitchen windows and start the adventure. Already pulled a tick out of my hair, maybe I should get a collar. The good news is I get to use my table saws and planer again. It has been too long.
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- markiver54
- Deputy Marshal
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- Location: Biue Ridge Mountains, NC
Re: dry rot in window sills
Good luck Ernie, just make sure it's dry rot and not termites!
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I'm your Huckleberry
Re: dry rot in window sills
Sometimes, a replacement is easier than a repair. The new synthetic silks are much easier to deal with. Good luck.
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Remember, it's not how many guns you have. It's how many bullets you have.
Re: dry rot in window sills
It is definitely dry rot.markiver54 wrote: ↑Sat Jun 22, 2019 6:49 pmGood luck Ernie, just make sure it's dry rot and not termites!
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- markiver54
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Re: dry rot in window sills
That's good...other repairs are relatively easy. Just comes a time when repairs are necessary..Ernie wrote: ↑Sat Jun 22, 2019 10:02 pmIt is definitely dry rot.markiver54 wrote: ↑Sat Jun 22, 2019 6:49 pmGood luck Ernie, just make sure it's dry rot and not termites!
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I'm your Huckleberry
Re: dry rot in window sills
Get some Git Rot at a marine supply if there is most of the sill left. You just drill several small holes and pour it in. When it hardens you can shape it or sand it and then paint. I was in the carpentry trade for fifty years and I don't know why folks call it dry rot. If if has not gotten wet it would not have rotted.
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Re: dry rot in window sills
I’ve seen houses in the plains areas that get very little rain, and sills deteriorate kinda like wet rot. I think because of high heat thru the years that the wood looses all the oils, causing the wood to be almost petrified. I ruined a chain saw blade on a tree that had been dead a few years.
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- markiver54
- Deputy Marshal
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- Joined: Sun Nov 04, 2018 11:49 am
- Location: Biue Ridge Mountains, NC
Re: dry rot in window sills
Off subject, however, makes me think of a pet peeve of my own. That's when people call a "Water Heater " a "Hot Water Heater "!Travlin wrote: ↑Sun Jun 23, 2019 1:09 amGet some Git Rot at a marine supply if there is most of the sill left. You just drill several small holes and pour it in. When it hardens you can shape it or sand it and then paint. I was in the carpentry trade for fifty years and I don't know why folks call it dry rot. If if has not gotten wet it would not have rotted.
If the water is already hot, it doesn't need to be heated!
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I'm your Huckleberry
Re: dry rot in window sills
Working on kitchen windows. Cut out rot, worried it down to firmer wood, coated with wood hardener and now another trip to the lumberyard. Going to fill with epoxy putty, sand and attach a new piece of sill. Had to order siding to fill in broken shingles that will take a week to get but it may take me that long to finish this section and be ready to move on to the next set. Hoping to learn along the way so it speeds up some. Only five more to go.Watched many videos last night and they make it look sooooo easy.
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