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#1
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sfb wrote:
If you live in a hurricane area you have a problem with humidity and mold. Most folks might not have inside storage with or without AC so storing plywood at Home Depot may be the cheapest alternative. Then what do you do with $400 worth of plywood? It seems old fashoned storm shutters would be the way to go. |
#2
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Old fashioned may be just that: old fashioned. The two problems are
debris breaking the windows and the wind literally pushing in the entire window frame which is why plywood is anchored to the outside walls. After Andrew in 1992, there were extensive upgrades to building codes since what was thought to be sufficient wasn't. One example is a frame attached to the inside walls under he wallboard to keep windows from being pushed in by the wind and rain. After Charley in 2004, you could spot developments build pre and post Andrew from the air. "JohnH" wrote in message . .. sfb wrote: If you live in a hurricane area you have a problem with humidity and mold. Most folks might not have inside storage with or without AC so storing plywood at Home Depot may be the cheapest alternative. Then what do you do with $400 worth of plywood? It seems old fashoned storm shutters would be the way to go. |
#3
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sfb wrote:
Old fashioned may be just that: old fashioned. The two problems are debris breaking the windows and the wind literally pushing in the entire window frame which is why plywood is anchored to the outside walls. I was referring to storm shutters which, last time I saw them, were not made of glass. |
#4
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JohnH wrote:
sfb wrote: Old fashioned may be just that: old fashioned. The two problems are debris breaking the windows and the wind literally pushing in the entire window frame which is why plywood is anchored to the outside walls. I was referring to storm shutters which, last time I saw them, were not made of glass. No, but most of the old-fashioned designs are mounted to the window frame or depend on the frame for support when closed. George Patterson Drink is the curse of the land. It makes you quarrel with your neighbor. It makes you shoot at your landlord. And it makes you miss him. |
#5
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![]() sfb wrote: Old fashioned may be just that: old fashioned. The two problems are debris breaking the windows and the wind literally pushing in the entire window frame which is why plywood is anchored to the outside walls. After Andrew in 1992, there were extensive upgrades to building codes since what was thought to be sufficient wasn't. One example is a frame attached to the inside walls under he wallboard to keep windows from being pushed in by the wind and rain. After Charley in 2004, you could spot developments build pre and post Andrew from the air. Yep, my folks have a house in Naples. No need for plywood or shutters. They have a film on the windows that will stop the flying debris. Hard to believe it's better than the metal hurricane shutters that roll down but they are. The houses built from the mid 90's on do not suffer any real hurricane damage anymore, just the screening over the pool area gets damaged. "JohnH" wrote in message . .. sfb wrote: If you live in a hurricane area you have a problem with humidity and mold. Most folks might not have inside storage with or without AC so storing plywood at Home Depot may be the cheapest alternative. Then what do you do with $400 worth of plywood? It seems old fashoned storm shutters would be the way to go. |
#6
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Same thing you do with any plywood...build shelves and work tables in your
hanger. Mike MU-2 "JohnH" wrote in message . .. sfb wrote: If you live in a hurricane area you have a problem with humidity and mold. Most folks might not have inside storage with or without AC so storing plywood at Home Depot may be the cheapest alternative. Then what do you do with $400 worth of plywood? It seems old fashoned storm shutters would be the way to go. |
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