Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Listen to your builder, who is thinking about practicality and durability. Your architect is thinking about how a photo of the job will look on his website.
Most architects are idiots.
Harsh, but architects do lack practical judgment -- a friend lives in a house previously built and occupied by an architect, who didn't like the look of gutters
There’s no problem with no gutters - plenty of high end custom homes are surrounded by French drains. It’s a more complicated design and requires more site work but it’s not automatically a problem.
You clearly have no idea what is on the market or how the new means and methods are implemented. The issue is every wants to install like they have for 40 years, and that is not how its done anymore. You need change your methods along with the change in products.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Go with whatever is more waterproof.
Yes, you're looking for ease of maintenance, not a fleeting trend.
OP here.
About waterproofing — definitely agree that's priority #1. That said, my plans already call for:
* ZIP-R sheathing (integrated WRB + insulation)
* ZIP flashing system (tape and liquid flash)
* Rainscreen assembly (drainage mat)
So from what I understand, the actual waterproofing is handled at the sheathing layer, not the siding or exterior trim. The siding is essentially decorative and part of the outer cladding. The rainscreen adds a pressure-equalized drainage plane behind it.
Wouldn’t trim vs. no trim mostly impact appearance and install complexity—not true waterproofing—especially if the flashing is done right?
More than happy to hear pushback if I’m missing something.
I’m starting to think the builder prefers trim because it hides imperfect siding cuts and makes installation easier, whereas a trimless approach is more technical but aligns with the clean, modern and luxury look.
bulk water management should be done by the cladding (siding/trim) not by the drainage plane, which is a backup that manages drying of bulk water and moisture on the backside of the cladding
That's simply not true in modern homes. The primary water management strategy is the drainage plane — i.e., the fully sealed ZIP-R layer behind a ventilated rainscreen. The siding and trim are part of a screened cladding system — they shed most bulk water, yes, but the actual waterproofing happens at the sheathing layer.
That’s why products like ZIP, Delta-Vent SA, or even Prosoco liquid systems are used with open-joint claddings and rainscreens. They’re built to handle water intrusion behind the siding and dry quickly, which wouldn’t be possible if the siding was expected to be watertight on its own.
This is why modern stuff is terrible and doesn’t last. The old, sturdier ways are better. Modern is designed without practicality in mind, or to fail so you need to redo it in 20 years. Avoid stupid errors like relying on marketing from product salesmen.
100%
Simple old school exterior surfaces. All this new stuff is garbage.
Anonymous wrote:Go with whatever is more waterproof.
Anonymous wrote:Are you black-and-white-ifying a 100-yr old home, stripping it of its original look and period-appropriate embellishments?
If so, go with the trimless windows so your home will be on trend and look like every single other renovation in the District. High end or cheap flip, doesn’t matter as long as it has that look of a Monopoly house
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Go with whatever is more waterproof.
Yes, you're looking for ease of maintenance, not a fleeting trend.
OP here.
About waterproofing — definitely agree that's priority #1. That said, my plans already call for:
* ZIP-R sheathing (integrated WRB + insulation)
* ZIP flashing system (tape and liquid flash)
* Rainscreen assembly (drainage mat)
So from what I understand, the actual waterproofing is handled at the sheathing layer, not the siding or exterior trim. The siding is essentially decorative and part of the outer cladding. The rainscreen adds a pressure-equalized drainage plane behind it.
Wouldn’t trim vs. no trim mostly impact appearance and install complexity—not true waterproofing—especially if the flashing is done right?
More than happy to hear pushback if I’m missing something.
I’m starting to think the builder prefers trim because it hides imperfect siding cuts and makes installation easier, whereas a trimless approach is more technical but aligns with the clean, modern and luxury look.
bulk water management should be done by the cladding (siding/trim) not by the drainage plane, which is a backup that manages drying of bulk water and moisture on the backside of the cladding
That's simply not true in modern homes. The primary water management strategy is the drainage plane — i.e., the fully sealed ZIP-R layer behind a ventilated rainscreen. The siding and trim are part of a screened cladding system — they shed most bulk water, yes, but the actual waterproofing happens at the sheathing layer.
That’s why products like ZIP, Delta-Vent SA, or even Prosoco liquid systems are used with open-joint claddings and rainscreens. They’re built to handle water intrusion behind the siding and dry quickly, which wouldn’t be possible if the siding was expected to be watertight on its own.
This is why modern stuff is terrible and doesn’t last. The old, sturdier ways are better. Modern is designed without practicality in mind, or to fail so you need to redo it in 20 years. Avoid stupid errors like relying on marketing from product salesmen.
100%
Simple old school exterior surfaces. All this new stuff is garbage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Go with whatever is more waterproof.
Yes, you're looking for ease of maintenance, not a fleeting trend.
OP here.
About waterproofing — definitely agree that's priority #1. That said, my plans already call for:
* ZIP-R sheathing (integrated WRB + insulation)
* ZIP flashing system (tape and liquid flash)
* Rainscreen assembly (drainage mat)
So from what I understand, the actual waterproofing is handled at the sheathing layer, not the siding or exterior trim. The siding is essentially decorative and part of the outer cladding. The rainscreen adds a pressure-equalized drainage plane behind it.
Wouldn’t trim vs. no trim mostly impact appearance and install complexity—not true waterproofing—especially if the flashing is done right?
More than happy to hear pushback if I’m missing something.
I’m starting to think the builder prefers trim because it hides imperfect siding cuts and makes installation easier, whereas a trimless approach is more technical but aligns with the clean, modern and luxury look.
bulk water management should be done by the cladding (siding/trim) not by the drainage plane, which is a backup that manages drying of bulk water and moisture on the backside of the cladding
That's simply not true in modern homes. The primary water management strategy is the drainage plane — i.e., the fully sealed ZIP-R layer behind a ventilated rainscreen. The siding and trim are part of a screened cladding system — they shed most bulk water, yes, but the actual waterproofing happens at the sheathing layer.
That’s why products like ZIP, Delta-Vent SA, or even Prosoco liquid systems are used with open-joint claddings and rainscreens. They’re built to handle water intrusion behind the siding and dry quickly, which wouldn’t be possible if the siding was expected to be watertight on its own.
This is why modern stuff is terrible and doesn’t last. The old, sturdier ways are better. Modern is designed without practicality in mind, or to fail so you need to redo it in 20 years. Avoid stupid errors like relying on marketing from product salesmen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Listen to your builder, who is thinking about practicality and durability. Your architect is thinking about how a photo of the job will look on his website.
Most architects are idiots.
Harsh, but architects do lack practical judgment -- a friend lives in a house previously built and occupied by an architect, who didn't like the look of gutters
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Go with whatever is more waterproof.
Yes, you're looking for ease of maintenance, not a fleeting trend.
OP here.
About waterproofing — definitely agree that's priority #1. That said, my plans already call for:
* ZIP-R sheathing (integrated WRB + insulation)
* ZIP flashing system (tape and liquid flash)
* Rainscreen assembly (drainage mat)
So from what I understand, the actual waterproofing is handled at the sheathing layer, not the siding or exterior trim. The siding is essentially decorative and part of the outer cladding. The rainscreen adds a pressure-equalized drainage plane behind it.
Wouldn’t trim vs. no trim mostly impact appearance and install complexity—not true waterproofing—especially if the flashing is done right?
More than happy to hear pushback if I’m missing something.
I’m starting to think the builder prefers trim because it hides imperfect siding cuts and makes installation easier, whereas a trimless approach is more technical but aligns with the clean, modern and luxury look.