For background I’ve installed Hardie for two years for a certified James Hardie alliance contractor. You did a great job with the flashings especially the end dams on your z flashing above your blocks and windows. A lot of guys bend dog ears down around the trim and caulk where wind driven rain can and will get in behind the siding. An end dam is a much better approach as it’ll never fail unlike caulk and I think it’s cleaner than a blob of caulk in the corner of that 1/4 crevice. But it jumped out at me right away your bottom row is entirely way too close to the ground. Hardie recommends at least 6 inches from grade and more likely than not that first row will be crumbling after a few years of winter snow and spring and summer rain. A lot of times the framing starts less than 6 inches off the ground and you gotta cover it. To avoid this problem, use a 5/4 piece of PVC like Azek or Boral which is leagues ahead of Hardie in water resistance. Then a z flashing above it taped which is fine if you have incredibly tight and kickass tyvek job like this one, but better to cut tyvek and lap it over the nailing flange of your flashing then tape. Furthermore, the 1/8 butting to trim is a nice detail as well. I’ve measured full pieces of Hardie at 144 1/4 on hot humid summer days. So on winter days definitely don’t skip that step. For dust mitigation you are absolutely right about the shears. They even make battery and air powered ones so when your 20 30 even 40 feet up a wall the installer can cut on the scaffolding if your piece is a hair too long without handing it back down to your cut guy. A circular saw with a HEPA vacuum and bag is also a good option but still some dust escapes so a respirator or at least a particle n95 should still be worn. Also a job site fan to blow any dust that escapes the vacuum is another good addition. Some tricks of the trade to speed up the process is stack your pieces and get em straight and you can hang cut your starter pieces. Just make sure your nail line is on the same side for all of pieces or your factory edge will be on the wrong side. For window cutouts or anything else you need to cutout for instead of measuring to your inch and a quarter you butt your tape into the trim and measure to the bottom edge of the last row of siding. Then subtract your reveal and you have what your keeping below the window. You get 10 1/2 - 7 inch reveal = 3 1/2 keep from the bottom. Do this on both sides of the window. In a perfect world they should be the same but if siding or the window is just a tiny bit out of level they’ll be different. Hopefully this helps anybody looking to tackle some siding on their home. And all in all this is a pretty good install.
So you are saying if the bottom row is closer than 6 inches , we have to start the row with a pvc trim? Would it look funny if one side of the house starts this way, because only my drive way side of my house is about 3 Inches above ground
@@TKCL Hi. 2 questions please. 1) with the hardi so low to the ground, how do you protect it from weed eaters and bangs and 2) if there is a gap between the hardi and the house where critters come in at the bottom, how to do block it so they don't? Thanks!!
What a fn fantastic video. So informative. Answered every damn question that James Hardie, Lowes, and Home Depot don't answer like they're religiously sworn to obfuscate it. Protect this man at all costs.
Man this was really one of the greatest step by step videos I've seen. You broke down every instruction in a way that all can understand thanks brother!
I've watched so many siding installation videos on UA-cam and none of them showed the tips and tricks the way you do. Truly the best siding instructional video hands down. Subscribed to your channel!!!! Good job my friend!
I’ve watched many installation videos in preparation for my first large project. This is by far my favorite. It helps give the confidence that it isn’t rocket science-just needs to be done right. The comments are very helpful as well. Thanks for the video.
The best video for installing hardie. Gave me the confidence I needed to do my daughters small home and being a perfectionist, know that it’s done correctly. Thanks so much!
Glad it could give you the confidence to try something new. That's what we hope to give people here. Many of the projects I show is something I have never done before. You just have to give it a shot and learn as you go. Thanks for watching.
I love your style, dude! You are clear, sensible, skilled, and informative. I'm relatively new at DIY and tend to work alone, so I truly appreciate your generous spirt.
I didn't want to do it at all, much less do it alone..but..I accept it now. Thanks for this. I've learned quite a bit over the last few years about doing stuff. This is when the silver lining of this medium shines. So many people doing stuff alone. Carry on.
Great help for self installation. We had an opportunity to use shears and it was great due to low dust but it had its own little issues ( perhaps it was the brand of shears-Dewalt). Shears made a little indentation on a front face of the board so we learned to cut on a back side which is also recommended when using circular saw for cleaner looking cut on a front of the board. Also, as someone suggested, having added Aztek board from the bottom is a great idea (we have it) to increase the distance from the ground and have waterproof board. Looking at the video, your distance is less than what we had to begin with and when rain or grass watering hits, it splatters up quite a bit more than people realize, hence why increasing cement board distance from the ground is a great idea. Thanks again for the video.
Hi Andrew I think I am as excited as you seeing this siding being installed. It really looks good. Your doing a great job as usual and explain things very well Thank you. Have a great day and will see you Sunday. Take care. 🇨🇦
Good job on the install and sharing the tips you've learned. You made it easy to understand the process. I might be doing this to my house and never touched Hardie siding before. Thanks for sharing how you did it alone.
You can use a zip tie to the end of your nail gun and cut it from the center of the nail to an inch and a quarter . Just put top of the cut zip tie to the top of the Harding board. Then you can run and have it perfect. It's very important to keep that inch and inch and a quarter I know you know Andrew but just in case somebody else might know that.
Really like how you're using the tractor front end loader as a table / bench / work holder for materials. Always where you need it, adjustable height, just so. Wish I had one!
Great job; I appreciate that you explained everything in a lot of detail. I have to do a project like this in a few weeks and your video was the best I've seen! 👍
Andrew this is interesting, you've explained the tips and techniques that are used for it and it is a great job with the siding and even else you've done.
Awesome video, tons of info. I’m preparing to do our place soon and haven’t really ever worked with hardie planks. Much appreciation on the info friend. Got a new subscriber.
Great video. Well done on the presentation and detail. I will definitely be using several of your recommendations and tips when I install Hardie on our new home. Thank you!
What an awesome how-to on hardy siding Andrew! Looking great and saw a glimpse of the real inspector (Bullet) coming around to approve of the progress. Tiffany has him trained well. 🤣
@@TKCL Absolutely helpful, I'm doing a very small siding project this weekend and using these techniques and tools Thank you! What is your opinion on the WEN brand fiber cement siding tool? I have literally about 30 cuts to do , all str8 cuts. Was thinking of getting it as I dont do this for a living , but very handy guy doing this for a friend.
Great job, thanks for the tips,I will start my first project with the hardieboard installation next I just following your video ,you’re doing amazing job,thanks thanks
I've never heard of anyone else doing this, but I used my tile saw to cut my Hardie planks. I couldn't stomach sending toxic dust all over my neighborhood. I built some 2 x 4 tables to support the planks and just slid them through like a table saw. Worked for all of the window cuts too.
Now I see how thoughtful it was to put that tank away from the house, you wouldn't be able to use that nail gun otherwise:))) Looking great, you've done great job with all that tiny pieces!!!
Great job andrew!!! Very informative, looking like a pro! I know the camera speeds it up and doesnt show how hard that is to do by yourself. Attaboy!!!
Hey I made it out of surgery just fine!! They got my mass removed out of my stomach and stuff so far so good other then I keep crashing now on my sugar lol.. Anyway that's some really cool stuff!! Keep up the great job I have been watching all the videos trust me I haven't missed any of them just been off to the side dealing with all this medical crap lol.. Anyway best wishes from Southern IL keep up the great work!
Excellent video! I've been looking at many. I have a detached garage that is 67 years old and has cedar shake siding that is that old as well. The previous owner, trying to bring it up to financing specs before selling, decided to shoot it with paint (rather than restain) before I bought the property (23 years ago). Ugh! I painted it once, 10 years ago, but the cedar shakes will not take another proper pre-painting prep (but hey, 67 years is about 37 years more than the average lifespan of cedar shake siding). I'm looking at residing it next summer. I'm looking for something that isn't too complicated to do, not that expensive, will stand up to the elements and time, and will require normal maintenance (paint and caulk). Hardie siding looks like it will fit the bill. Now I have to become a "youtube expert" in doing the job in the next 11 months (LOL). Thanks for the video!
Glad you enjoyed it. Fiber cement siding is wonderful in many ways, rot resistant, bug resistant, fire resistant and usually you get a homeowners discount on insurance for it too.
I always learn something from your videos. Great job in talking me through. I am a noob on much of home construction (I have done things before but my Father was the Foremen so to speak lol). I did see either in your video or the James Hardie video that you should block off penetrations such as outlets and seal cocks for faucets. What if you need to put in an external seal cock/faucet in the future? Thanks again from your videos - I always enjoy and learn. All the best from north Texas!
Your making it look easy Good job. I've worked for diding company and needed a refresher course because I start a new job tomorrow and you showed me those new hold on clips that I never new existed and if I would have had those back in the day! We would shoot a galvanized ring shank nail in place to hold for the next course. Thanks for the tips on that 👍.! I'm nervous when I start with a new company especially when the boss says that the guy I will be working with barely gets 180ft done in a shift 🙃 😵💫😵🥴🥵🥵🥵🥵🥵
That is very true if it ain't broke don't fix it I've never seen any kind of tools like that you better hang on to those they don't make them like they used 👍🏽
This is really interesting Andrew. Is this type of siding material commonly used throughout the U.S.? What about this type of material made it your choice to go with? I've enjoyed your entire house building series, even all the electrical episodes, as I like to learn about this stuff. I enjoy your channel, so thank you and your wife for sharing with your viewers.
Thank you for watching! Yes fiber cement siding is very common. Practically rot resistant, bugs and termites don't touch it, it doesn't burn and so on.
Ok Andrew that’s another toy , I mean tool I had to buy. But my husband’s not getting it that’s mine he can have his old clunky tape measure! 🤣 Siding is looking great👍💞
Excellent Andrew, why not use a flashing card where the horizontalm boards meet the vertical trim. Yes caulk it but still have the aluminum card barrier between the elements and the Tyvec. I have never seen the cards used. My sideing is Masonite and 49 years old but still looks good and in good shape. It's been painted and taken care of though.
What I should have done was run a long vertical strip of zip tape flashing on the corners. But Tyvek is great stuff, I trust it will shed any water intrusion.
I’m repairing hardie board and batten siding now on a lakehouse. The bottoms of every piece are crumbling. They originally ran the siding all way down to the ground. I had no idea that hardie was capable of rotting like this. I’m cutting up 6” around the entire house and installing 1x6 Azek with Z flashing.
I appreciate some detail info. 👍💯Ummm? I wonder why you did not use strapping on the wall to attach the harding too to allow for air flow behind the harding? Appreciate the time it took to prepare and present this to us to help us prep for our future projects. 🙏🇨🇦🍁
I'm about to tackle this project myself, and was wondering if the sheers would be as good as the saw for something like the cutout you did for the board below the window? Really good job of explaining things…Thanks alot!
For background I’ve installed Hardie for two years for a certified James Hardie alliance contractor.
You did a great job with the flashings especially the end dams on your z flashing above your blocks and windows. A lot of guys bend dog ears down around the trim and caulk where wind driven rain can and will get in behind the siding. An end dam is a much better approach as it’ll never fail unlike caulk and I think it’s cleaner than a blob of caulk in the corner of that 1/4 crevice.
But it jumped out at me right away your bottom row is entirely way too close to the ground. Hardie recommends at least 6 inches from grade and more likely than not that first row will be crumbling after a few years of winter snow and spring and summer rain. A lot of times the framing starts less than 6 inches off the ground and you gotta cover it. To avoid this problem, use a 5/4 piece of PVC like Azek or Boral which is leagues ahead of Hardie in water resistance. Then a z flashing above it taped which is fine if you have incredibly tight and kickass tyvek job like this one, but better to cut tyvek and lap it over the nailing flange of your flashing then tape. Furthermore, the 1/8 butting to trim is a nice detail as well. I’ve measured full pieces of Hardie at 144 1/4 on hot humid summer days. So on winter days definitely don’t skip that step.
For dust mitigation you are absolutely right about the shears. They even make battery and air powered ones so when your 20 30 even 40 feet up a wall the installer can cut on the scaffolding if your piece is a hair too long without handing it back down to your cut guy. A circular saw with a HEPA vacuum and bag is also a good option but still some dust escapes so a respirator or at least a particle n95 should still be worn. Also a job site fan to blow any dust that escapes the vacuum is another good addition.
Some tricks of the trade to speed up the process is stack your pieces and get em straight and you can hang cut your starter pieces. Just make sure your nail line is on the same side for all of pieces or your factory edge will be on the wrong side.
For window cutouts or anything else you need to cutout for instead of measuring to your inch and a quarter you butt your tape into the trim and measure to the bottom edge of the last row of siding. Then subtract your reveal and you have what your keeping below the window. You get 10 1/2 - 7 inch reveal = 3 1/2 keep from the bottom. Do this on both sides of the window. In a perfect world they should be the same but if siding or the window is just a tiny bit out of level they’ll be different.
Hopefully this helps anybody looking to tackle some siding on their home. And all in all this is a pretty good install.
Great information, thanks!
I think he is in Florida not much snow is going to pile up
So you are saying if the bottom row is closer than 6 inches , we have to start the row with a pvc trim? Would it look funny if one side of the house starts this way, because only my drive way side of my house is about 3 Inches above ground
@@TKCL Hi. 2 questions please. 1) with the hardi so low to the ground, how do you protect it from weed eaters and bangs and 2) if there is a gap between the hardi and the house where critters come in at the bottom, how to do block it so they don't? Thanks!!
Thanks for the additional info, without taking anything away from the OP.
What a fn fantastic video. So informative. Answered every damn question that James Hardie, Lowes, and Home Depot don't answer like they're religiously sworn to obfuscate it. Protect this man at all costs.
Glad it was helpful
Word
Obfuscate... I'm gonna use that in a sentence today. Love new words, and yes, he covers a lot here I didn't see in other videos. Thank you @TKCL !!
Man this was really one of the greatest step by step videos I've seen. You broke down every instruction in a way that all can understand thanks brother!
Glad you enjoyed it
I've watched so many siding installation videos on UA-cam and none of them showed the tips and tricks the way you do. Truly the best siding instructional video hands down. Subscribed to your channel!!!! Good job my friend!
Glad you enjoyed it
You are the best one man crew I have ever seen.
Thank you for watching
One of the best instructional videos I ever seen on youtube!
Glad you enjoyed it
I’ve watched many installation videos in preparation for my first large project. This is by far my favorite. It helps give the confidence that it isn’t rocket science-just needs to be done right. The comments are very helpful as well. Thanks for the video.
Glad you enjoyed it!
The best video for installing hardie. Gave me the confidence I needed to do my daughters small home and being a perfectionist, know that it’s done correctly. Thanks so much!
Glad it could give you the confidence to try something new. That's what we hope to give people here. Many of the projects I show is something I have never done before. You just have to give it a shot and learn as you go. Thanks for watching.
Anytime I make a cut, I spray it with primer. Caulking sticks better, it will sometimes peel away from a raw edge.
I love your style, dude! You are clear, sensible, skilled, and informative. I'm relatively new at DIY and tend to work alone, so I truly appreciate your generous spirt.
Glad it was helpful.
I didn't want to do it at all, much less do it alone..but..I accept it now. Thanks for this. I've learned quite a bit over the last few years about doing stuff. This is when the silver lining of this medium shines. So many people doing stuff alone. Carry on.
You can do it!
Great help for self installation. We had an opportunity to use shears and it was great due to low dust but it had its own little issues ( perhaps it was the brand of shears-Dewalt). Shears made a little indentation on a front face of the board so we learned to cut on a back side which is also recommended when using circular saw for cleaner looking cut on a front of the board. Also, as someone suggested, having added Aztek board from the bottom is a great idea (we have it) to increase the distance from the ground and have waterproof board. Looking at the video, your distance is less than what we had to begin with and when rain or grass watering hits, it splatters up quite a bit more than people realize, hence why increasing cement board distance from the ground is a great idea. Thanks again for the video.
By far the best James hardy vid ou there. And I feel I watch em all. Thanks man you earned a new sub!
Welcome to the channel. Thanks for watching!
I stack my Hardie painted side down to avoid saw scuffing. Great video!
Hi Andrew I think I am as excited as you seeing this siding being installed. It really looks good. Your doing a great job as usual and explain things very well Thank you. Have a great day and will see you Sunday. Take care. 🇨🇦
Thank you! See you tomorrow
Just a generous helping of explanation..... really appreciate all the tool recommendations, and zeroing in on the details!!!
Glad you enjoyed it
I am looking at doing my first Hardie siding job. You made it look easier. Great job.
Thank you for watching
One of the best how-to's on hardy siding I've seen. thanks
Thank you for watching
I appreciate the way you explain the things you are doing and show us all the the gadgets and tricks you are using.
Glad you find it useful
I've used those shears for cement board 1/2 inch and I love it. Should have bought it years ago. Well worth the money
Love your one man shows. Thanks for educated a viewer like myself.. appreciated much...
Thank you for watching
LOVIN' the opening sky!
Good job on the install and sharing the tips you've learned. You made it easy to understand the process. I might be doing this to my house and never touched Hardie siding before. Thanks for sharing how you did it alone.
Glad you enjoyed it
Your home is huuuuge ! Gunna try this my self
Not as big as it seems. Thanks for watching.
My friend, what size nails do you recommend?
2 1/2 inch ring shank Galvanized
You can use a zip tie to the end of your nail gun and cut it from the center of the nail to an inch and a quarter . Just put top of the cut zip tie to the top of the Harding board. Then you can run and have it perfect. It's very important to keep that inch and inch and a quarter I know you know Andrew but just in case somebody else might know that.
Good tip
What a difference that siding is making to the look of the house! It looks fantastic.
Yes it is!
Outstanding video. Am about to rip a lot of old vinyl off my house and this is perfect
Glad it was helpful
Great job Andrew! I bet Tiffany’s ecstatic! Looks wonderful.
It does make it look different
Love all of the tips and tricks!!!
Great job Andrew, you sure make siding look easy!
Thank you
Built a solar system just like yours and am about to do this siding. We think a lot alike 😅 thanks
Glad you enjoy the content.
A real mans, man! Thank you for this very informative video
Really like how you're using the tractor front end loader as a table / bench / work holder for materials. Always where you need it, adjustable height, just so. Wish I had one!
It's a huge help
Nice that you have one window on the west side of your house in Fl and main room faces north. Thank you for another great video.
Thank you for watching
Great job; I appreciate that you explained everything in a lot of detail. I have to do a project like this in a few weeks and your video was the best I've seen! 👍
Glad you enjoyed it
Great video. Very interesting video. That siding is looking great.
Thank you!
Outstanding the way you describe the details into installing the siding. Great job.
Thank you
Andrew is a one man band that can do it all... Amazing actually... 😃
Thank you
Excellent presentation skills! Nice video and easy to follow.
Glad you enjoyed it
Andrew this is interesting, you've explained the tips and techniques that are used for it and it is a great job with the siding and even else you've done.
Thank you very much
Good progress and starting to envision the final look. Enjoy the tips and really like watching you work OCD and all. Very informative👍
Thank you for watching and the feedback
Thank you for taking the time, great video
Thank you for the support!
I really liked this video. I'm from Brazil and I'm learning the profession. My English is not good, but I understood a lot.
Thank you for watching
Hi, Andrew! Wonderful progress! Excellent commentary! See you Sunday night.
Thank you! See you tomorrow
Awesome video, tons of info. I’m preparing to do our place soon and haven’t really ever worked with hardie planks. Much appreciation on the info friend. Got a new subscriber.
Glad you enjoyed it
Great video. Well done on the presentation and detail. I will definitely be using several of your recommendations and tips when I install Hardie on our new home. Thank you!
Thank you for watching
Great! Love seeing the siding go on and windows!👍👍👍
Thank you for all the information you put into this hopefully when I start doing my house it goes that smoothly
You got this!
Thank you for a very well done instructional video! You have an amazing ability to teach, nicely done.
Thank you for watching
Your doing a wonderful job on the house, not many people could do what you have done, now take a break kiddo, you deserve it SIR
Thank you very much
Best video out there for this type of product. Thank you
Glad you enjoyed it.
What an awesome how-to on hardy siding Andrew! Looking great and saw a glimpse of the real inspector (Bullet) coming around to approve of the progress. Tiffany has him trained well. 🤣
Wow man, outstanding video. Do it yourselfer attempting this soon. This video is a huge help! Thanks!!
Glad you enjoyed it
Nice sunrise opening. Siding is looking great Andrew.
Thanks 👍
Been following this build for a while now, you have done an amazing job brother! Keep up the good work!! Love the channel btw
Thank you for watching and the support
Great instruction video. Especially mentioning some products that may work better like shears. N some tricks of the trade. Well done!
Glad it was helpful!
@@TKCL Absolutely helpful, I'm doing a very small siding project this weekend and using these techniques and tools Thank you! What is your opinion on the WEN brand fiber cement siding tool? I have literally about 30 cuts to do , all str8 cuts. Was thinking of getting it as I dont do this for a living , but very handy guy doing this for a friend.
Awesome video - very helpful since my contractor left without installing the siding.
Sorry to hear that
This was seriously helpful! Tha ks for taking the time to make this video!
Glad you enjoyed it
Love the intro!!!!!
We've had some beautiful sunrises lately.
Looks good
Thank you
Great job, thanks for the tips,I will start my first project with the hardieboard installation next I just following your video ,you’re doing amazing job,thanks thanks
Glad you enjoyed it
Looks great!
Thank you
Great video, thanks for the info. I’ll be doing a small backside of a house in the next couple weeks
Good luck
The house is looking amazing. I am so happy for you guys.
Thank you
You're a great teacher. Thanks.
Glad you enjoyed it
I've never heard of anyone else doing this, but I used my tile saw to cut my Hardie planks. I couldn't stomach sending toxic dust all over my neighborhood. I built some 2 x 4 tables to support the planks and just slid them through like a table saw. Worked for all of the window cuts too.
Now I see how thoughtful it was to put that tank away from the house, you wouldn't be able to use that nail gun otherwise:))) Looking great, you've done great job with all that tiny pieces!!!
I actually carried the nail gun out there when moving the tank to make sure it would clear.
As always, GREAT job Andrew!!
Thank you
Looking good! You make it look easy. Wouldn't look so easy though if it were July in Florida.
You got that right!
Looking good Andrew!!
Thank you
Great video Andrew... Thank you!!!
Great job andrew!!! Very informative, looking like a pro! I know the camera speeds it up and doesnt show how hard that is to do by yourself. Attaboy!!!
Thank you very much!
Great video! 👍🏾
Thank you!
Hey I made it out of surgery just fine!! They got my mass removed out of my stomach and stuff so far so good other then I keep crashing now on my sugar lol.. Anyway that's some really cool stuff!! Keep up the great job I have been watching all the videos trust me I haven't missed any of them just been off to the side dealing with all this medical crap lol.. Anyway best wishes from Southern IL keep up the great work!
Very glad to hear it went well, hope you heal quickly and get back to enjoying life. Take care and thanks for watching!
Excellent video! I've been looking at many. I have a detached garage that is 67 years old and has cedar shake siding that is that old as well. The previous owner, trying to bring it up to financing specs before selling, decided to shoot it with paint (rather than restain) before I bought the property (23 years ago). Ugh! I painted it once, 10 years ago, but the cedar shakes will not take another proper pre-painting prep (but hey, 67 years is about 37 years more than the average lifespan of cedar shake siding). I'm looking at residing it next summer. I'm looking for something that isn't too complicated to do, not that expensive, will stand up to the elements and time, and will require normal maintenance (paint and caulk). Hardie siding looks like it will fit the bill. Now I have to become a "youtube expert" in doing the job in the next 11 months (LOL). Thanks for the video!
Glad you enjoyed it. Fiber cement siding is wonderful in many ways, rot resistant, bug resistant, fire resistant and usually you get a homeowners discount on insurance for it too.
Great job. We are about to build a house and I’m thinking of doing the siding myself.
It's doable for sure!
@@TKCL thanks. What’s the lead time on hardie board now?
Always been in stock at my local Lowe's
Amazing video
Best video ever thanks.
Glad you liked it!
I always learn something from your videos. Great job in talking me through. I am a noob on much of home construction (I have done things before but my Father was the Foremen so to speak lol). I did see either in your video or the James Hardie video that you should block off penetrations such as outlets and seal cocks for faucets. What if you need to put in an external seal cock/faucet in the future? Thanks again from your videos - I always enjoy and learn. All the best from north Texas!
You can add after the fact, seal with a quality caulk.
Very good video. Thank you.
Glad you enjoyed it
looking really good bud..
Thank you
Thanks a million. House is looking like btw
Your making it look easy Good job.
I've worked for diding company and needed a refresher course because I start a new job tomorrow and you showed me those new hold on clips that I never new existed and if I would have had those back in the day! We would shoot a galvanized ring shank nail in place to hold for the next course.
Thanks for the tips on that 👍.!
I'm nervous when I start with a new company especially when the boss says that the guy I will be working with barely gets 180ft done in a shift 🙃 😵💫😵🥴🥵🥵🥵🥵🥵
Thank you, it is relatively easy.
Good instructions, looks great!
Thank you for watching
That is very true if it ain't broke don't fix it I've never seen any kind of tools like that you better hang on to those they don't make them like they used 👍🏽
Learning a lot.... Keep it up!!
Thank you for watching
This is really interesting Andrew. Is this type of siding material commonly used throughout the U.S.? What about this type of material made it your choice to go with? I've enjoyed your entire house building series, even all the electrical episodes, as I like to learn about this stuff. I enjoy your channel, so thank you and your wife for sharing with your viewers.
Thank you for watching! Yes fiber cement siding is very common. Practically rot resistant, bugs and termites don't touch it, it doesn't burn and so on.
Ok Andrew that’s another toy , I mean tool I had to buy. But my husband’s not getting it that’s mine he can have his old clunky tape measure! 🤣 Siding is looking great👍💞
It's totally worth the price.
Great video! Thank you!
Glad you enjoyed!
Excellent Andrew, why not use a flashing card where the horizontalm boards meet the vertical trim. Yes caulk it but still have the aluminum card barrier between the elements and the Tyvec. I have never seen the cards used. My sideing is Masonite and 49 years old but still looks good and in good shape. It's been painted and taken care of though.
What I should have done was run a long vertical strip of zip tape flashing on the corners. But Tyvek is great stuff, I trust it will shed any water intrusion.
thank you thats very helpful video.... keep it up Amigo
Glad it helped
Great video Thankyou for the details.
Glad it was helpful!
I’m repairing hardie board and batten siding now on a lakehouse. The bottoms of every piece are crumbling. They originally ran the siding all way down to the ground. I had no idea that hardie was capable of rotting like this. I’m cutting up 6” around the entire house and installing 1x6 Azek with Z flashing.
It's suggested by the manufacturer to stay 6 inches above grade. Most people get a 6 inch piece of pvc trim board and run as their first piece.
I appreciate some detail info. 👍💯Ummm? I wonder why you did not use strapping on the wall to attach the harding too to allow for air flow behind the harding? Appreciate the time it took to prepare and present this to us to help us prep for our future projects. 🙏🇨🇦🍁
Never seen it done that way here.
Great video. Would you mind providing the nail gun model and the size nails you used?
I forget the model, but it's a Bostitch coil siding nailer. 2 1/2 inch hot dipped ring shank galvanized nails.
I'm about to tackle this project myself, and was wondering if the sheers would be as good as the saw for something like the cutout you did for the board below the window? Really good job of explaining things…Thanks alot!
Hard to say for those cutouts as I've never used the shears. You could always use the jigsaw blades for the odd cuts.
great job thank you for doing this god bless
Glad it was helpful.
Have you ever installed hardi over ridged foam board insulation?
Question, nail length is? I’ve got the same Bostitch coil nailer, very good nailer too. Thanks foe the video, well done.
2 1/2 inch ring shank Galvanized is usually what's required.
@@TKCL thank you, appreciate info& reply.
You listed every other product you used, but what about the nailer?
Here you go, I love that nailer. amzn.to/4bWRACq
Thanks
Thank you for watching