1:40 really important. But when using expanding foam and the gap around the window frame is less than 1/4”, how do you ensure that the foam properly penetrates the same depth as the window? Also. It’s reasonable to say you shouldn’t feel any drafts and you shouldn’t hear noise through the sides of a window before you put trim back on??
Word to the wise: DO NOT tear and compress fiber glass insulation! Those fibers get embedded in your fingers (even through most gloves) and it can be an awful process when they push their way back out of your skin, weeks, months or years later. I still have this problem after I made this mistake over ten years ago.
Agreed. I was horrified to see that man pushing fiberglass insulation with his bare hands! Also cutting it with no mask! It's terrible to breathe those fibers in and it's a mess in your skin. I would recommend heavy duty work gloves with some kind of rubber coating on all the fingers and also wear some disposable nitrile gloves underneath that, and also a construction respirator mask when working with fiberglass.
Good video, however, you dont show what to do after the install on the outside of the window frame. The large gap under the window where the window meets the sill? What do you do there? That area needs to be filled in with something!
Lol. NOOO way it takes the average weekend warrior 20 minutes per window. They didn't account for those brad nails not pulling out cleanly. They didn't account for the moulding joints already being glued and cracking and breaking the moulding when you pull it off. They didn't account for WINDOW SILL. They didn't account for re-caulking. For me, this is an hour a window.
Well, there's no way to not compress insulation in a space that small. Hence, some insulation is better than none. The foam is really more for air sealing and stopping drafts, than insulating, in this case.
@@newmankramer1903no, i mean backer rod, which itself is a type of PE foam, looks like a long noodle, placed in the gap would do a better job filling the space than tearing clumps of fiberglass insulation to stuff in there. Then, if you want to use spray foam you can, or caulking, as it would havr a much less deep gap to fill after the backer rod. That's what it's made for.
@@GenZyannd agreed. Backer rod to fill the depth then spray foam on top. Compressing fiberglass reduces efficacy and also it will fail due to moisture, on the exterior of the home.
Help... I recently discovered that there is zero insulation around our windows and when I took the trim off the first window, I could see the house across the street through the gap at the bottom of the window (not at the sides...not sure about the top). At the bottom of each window, the gyproc to the left and right of the windows is also cracking, peeling, and discolouring which I was told was caused by warm air and cold air meeting and forming condensation that is breaking down the drywall. If I use the low expansion "Great Stuff", will it still expand out onto the stucco on the outside of the house or expand anywhere else...down in behind the stucco wire??? I used a caulking gun and siliconed the gaps between the windows and the stucco on the outside and was thinking of using my prybar to jam a little bit of batt insulation around the windows and then using the spray foam. If I just put insulation, does that act as a vapour barrier too? I had once heard that insulation was not added to some windows nor stucco sealed to the window frames to allow moisture to escape...but that seems weird.
if you took the time to dry-fit that casing, you'd know to shorten your top piece an 1/8 of an inch (to start) to allow the sides to pull back in and fix those poor top corner miter joints...
Jay Diaz foam is better, not only will it insulate but it will air seal the gap, fiberglass will not do that. The excess foam and can trimmed once cured.
Terrible advice. That pink fiberglass does nothing to stop drafts. That’s why it’s all black and dirty when it’s been in place for a while. It just acts as an air filter
Good try but terrible job! Never use batt insulation for windows, better than nothing but not the correct way to do this. Use a low expanding spray foam and do in two passes. This way when you trim the excess the first pass deep in side will still insulates properly.
A good teacher always makes the student feel confident. Some do it nice, some do it with hardship and some do it in between.
1:40 really important.
But when using expanding foam and the gap around the window frame is less than 1/4”, how do you ensure that the foam properly penetrates the same depth as the window?
Also. It’s reasonable to say you shouldn’t feel any drafts and you shouldn’t hear noise through the sides of a window before you put trim back on??
You have to apply like half/half way. Do the ext then the int next day.
Word to the wise: DO NOT tear and compress fiber glass insulation! Those fibers get embedded in your fingers (even through most gloves) and it can be an awful process when they push their way back out of your skin, weeks, months or years later. I still have this problem after I made this mistake over ten years ago.
Agreed. I was horrified to see that man pushing fiberglass insulation with his bare hands! Also cutting it with no mask! It's terrible to breathe those fibers in and it's a mess in your skin. I would recommend heavy duty work gloves with some kind of rubber coating on all the fingers and also wear some disposable nitrile gloves underneath that, and also a construction respirator mask when working with fiberglass.
Good video, however, you dont show what to do after the install on the outside of the window frame. The large gap under the window where the window meets the sill? What do you do there? That area needs to be filled in with something!
Lol. NOOO way it takes the average weekend warrior 20 minutes per window. They didn't account for those brad nails not pulling out cleanly. They didn't account for the moulding joints already being glued and cracking and breaking the moulding when you pull it off. They didn't account for WINDOW SILL. They didn't account for re-caulking. For me, this is an hour a window.
🤣😂😂 they didn’t account for the surprise termite infestation and a full blown wall rebuild either.
you say to push the batt insulation all the way back to fill the depth. i thought you LOSE insulation value when you compress fiberglass batts?
YUP, this guy doesn't know what the hell he's talking about. "STUFFING IT IN THERE" is the worst thing you can do!
Well, there's no way to not compress insulation in a space that small. Hence, some insulation is better than none. The foam is really more for air sealing and stopping drafts, than insulating, in this case.
@@mikeleone1347 better practice is to fill with backer rod before spray foam. That's how u address the depth.
@@Beenthere2xsyou mean glass insulation into deep and then spray foam on surface?
@@newmankramer1903no, i mean backer rod, which itself is a type of PE foam, looks like a long noodle, placed in the gap would do a better job filling the space than tearing clumps of fiberglass insulation to stuff in there. Then, if you want to use spray foam you can, or caulking, as it would havr a much less deep gap to fill after the backer rod. That's what it's made for.
compressing insulation decreases the r value... although it is better than nothing, it is not the way to go.
backer rod will take care of the draft, and not concern with moisture rotting the fiberglass insulation.
@@GenZyannd agreed. Backer rod to fill the depth then spray foam on top. Compressing fiberglass reduces efficacy and also it will fail due to moisture, on the exterior of the home.
Help... I recently discovered that there is zero insulation around our windows and when I took the trim off the first window, I could see the house across the street through the gap at the bottom of the window (not at the sides...not sure about the top). At the bottom of each window, the gyproc to the left and right of the windows is also cracking, peeling, and discolouring which I was told was caused by warm air and cold air meeting and forming condensation that is breaking down the drywall. If I use the low expansion "Great Stuff", will it still expand out onto the stucco on the outside of the house or expand anywhere else...down in behind the stucco wire??? I used a caulking gun and siliconed the gaps between the windows and the stucco on the outside and was thinking of using my prybar to jam a little bit of batt insulation around the windows and then using the spray foam. If I just put insulation, does that act as a vapour barrier too? I had once heard that insulation was not added to some windows nor stucco sealed to the window frames to allow moisture to escape...but that seems weird.
if you took the time to dry-fit that casing, you'd know to shorten your top piece an 1/8 of an inch (to start) to allow the sides to pull back in and fix those poor top corner miter joints...
How to seal the middle gap though!!?? No one addresses that issue.
What middle gap? Between the top and bottom panes? Weatherseal/weatherstrips.
which is insulation is better?
Jay Diaz foam is better, not only will it insulate but it will air seal the gap, fiberglass will not do that. The excess foam and can trimmed once cured.
J Watkins thanks
Terrible advice. That pink fiberglass does nothing to stop drafts. That’s why it’s all black and dirty when it’s been in place for a while. It just acts as an air filter
You mean it airpolluts , yes it might filter some shit on the outside, but then it brings a lot of fiberglass particles in the home. Happy asthma year
Good try but terrible job! Never use batt insulation for windows, better than nothing but not the correct way to do this. Use a low expanding spray foam and do in two passes. This way when you trim the excess the first pass deep in side will still insulates properly.
I was still cringing about handling fiberglass without gloves, but I guess that if you do it enough...
What brand do you recommend?
Ron Swanson would be proud
Awasome job
Are you serious here now? Like a professional? God.....:))))
Byebye headphone users. *ouch!*
I buckled my window frame 1st time ! Ha ha !
Useless! You left gaps!
Wtf? Is this the What-not to video?