That is thermo ply not cardboard and those are vinyl windows which most builders use. You don’t know what you are talking about. I think you need to educate yourself on building materials.
@@HarryPritchetthomes have been getting built with this material for decades. If your theory was true you would by now hear of homes are constantly falling over due to wind. But you don't so just because you believe something out of ignorance doesn't make it true.
Lol. That thermo ply will easily leak and mold will slowly grow behind walls you can’t see. That stuff is something a 2 year old could punch a hole through. OSB is better. Period.
@@diegolara4202how this comment holding up not even a year later? Familiar with the homes in Texas? 😂😂😂😂 GG to all the cheapskates. 😢😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂It’s Cardboard for real😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Thanks for posting. Meritage homes in Houston is building tons of houses with this Dryline sheathing cardboard. You stated that it's 1/4" thick but the actual thickness is 1/8" thick. At least the dryline sheets that Meritage is using. The prices of these cardboard houses start at $400K. What a rip-off.
Yes. I understand it’s 0.11” thick and peels apart with when it gets wet. I can kick a hole through it. I’ll take plywood and a wrap anyday instead of cardboard.
@@HarryPritchett Hold on tight to being narrow minded. Again, go learn how to actually build a home and study what materials are available and what they do.
Georgia. I would advise against buying a Century built home. People in our neighborhood have had nothing but complaints and can never get any of the problems resolved even with the basic 1 year home warranty.
Not cardboard exactly its actually good stuff that thermoply has a purpose windows standard vinyl way i look at it siding it will be easy to put new construction windows after that are upgraded plannng to buy a communty home
I was worried when I watched this video because I’m buying a home like this but it’s simply not true this company is using wood also on the so side of the material you showed. Your video is really unhelpful. Take it down it’s bull!
That's not true. They are installing the siding directly onto the Dryline cardboard sheathing. Call the builder and ask them if they are installing OSB or plywood on TOP of the dryline sheathing and the answer is no they are not.
Thanks for the video. No wonder why they are cheaper price than traditional new builds.
I’m buying a century complete in Florida and it’s not cardboard.
That is thermo ply not cardboard and those are vinyl windows which most builders use. You don’t know what you are talking about. I think you need to educate yourself on building materials.
We’ll see how it blows over when the winds get strong. Go buy a piece and poor some water on it. You’ll see it’s just cardboard. Cheers!
@@HarryPritchetthomes have been getting built with this material for decades. If your theory was true you would by now hear of homes are constantly falling over due to wind. But you don't so just because you believe something out of ignorance doesn't make it true.
Lol. That thermo ply will easily leak and mold will slowly grow behind walls you can’t see. That stuff is something a 2 year old could punch a hole through. OSB is better. Period.
I don't think you have ever walked through this JUNK like I have as a builder.
@@diegolara4202how this comment holding up not even a year later? Familiar with the homes in Texas? 😂😂😂😂 GG to all the cheapskates. 😢😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂It’s Cardboard for real😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Thanks for posting. Meritage homes in Houston is building tons of houses with this Dryline sheathing cardboard. You stated that it's 1/4" thick but the actual thickness is 1/8" thick. At least the dryline sheets that Meritage is using. The prices of these cardboard houses start at $400K. What a rip-off.
You do understand how thermo ply works correct? Those are Vinyl windows. I hope you're not a home inspector for a living.
Yes. I understand it’s 0.11” thick and peels apart with when it gets wet. I can kick a hole through it. I’ll take plywood and a wrap anyday instead of cardboard.
@@HarryPritchett Hold on tight to being narrow minded. Again, go learn how to actually build a home and study what materials are available and what they do.
@@corywekerle6862 give me some insight. We are looking at this builder in Texas
Don’t move to Florida real estate is getting rekt
@@HarryPritchett Do not talk to idiots, they want their home to make out of crapboard and paying 500k.
what state is this? im looking at this builder in texas
Georgia. I would advise against buying a Century built home. People in our neighborhood have had nothing but complaints and can never get any of the problems resolved even with the basic 1 year home warranty.
@@HarryPritchett where in GA?
I'm looking at this builder in Houston TX. Did this occur in this area?
@@HarryPritchett Wow, thank you! That's why they're so cheap!
Not cardboard exactly its actually good stuff that thermoply has a purpose windows standard vinyl way i look at it siding it will be easy to put new construction windows after that are upgraded plannng to buy a communty home
They are going to find out who I am soon!
I was worried when I watched this video because I’m buying a home like this but it’s simply not true this company is using wood also on the so side of the material you showed. Your video is really unhelpful. Take it down it’s bull!
That's not true. They are installing the siding directly onto the Dryline cardboard sheathing. Call the builder and ask them if they are installing OSB or plywood on TOP of the dryline sheathing and the answer is no they are not.