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Drafty Windows? How to Prepare Windows for Winter - CWE

Farmers’ Almanac is predicting a frigid winter with three whopper snowstorms! Ensuring that your windows are performing up to par can make a considerable difference in your home’s comfort level.

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Windows are part of your home’s thermal and building envelopes. Meaning, in the wintertime, your windows are designed to keep warm air IN and cold air OUT – and vice versa in the summertime.

Drafty windows? Stop the drafts before cold weather arrives!

windows in the winter windows in the summer

Did you know that drafty windows and doors are responsible for up to 30% of your home’s energy (heat!) loss?

The amount of heat potentially escaping through your drafty windows in the winter is the same amount of heat that would escape if you left 1 window wide open year-round. That’s crazy!

 

If Your Windows Look Like This

icy windows in winter

Then It Might Be Time To Ask Yourself These Questions:

  • Is your home always too cold in the winter?
  • Do you feel you’re paying too much for heat in the winter?
  • Can you feel the temperature drop whenever you walk past your windows?
  • Are your windows drafty?
  • Are your windows difficult to open or close?
  • Does the glass in your window panes rattle in the wind?
  • Do your curtains rustle even when your windows are closed?
  • Do you rely on storms (storm windows) to protect and insulate your windows in the winter?

If you answered yes to any of these questions, this could mean a variety of things:

  • Your window glass provides energy efficiency.
  • If your old window frames are made of wood, aluminum, or materials other than vinyl, your home’s building envelope may not seal properly.
  • Your windows may not insulate properly.

If you’ve read up on your home’s building envelope, the two most important concepts for ensuring your home is prepared for winter are insulating and sealing (your home’s building envelope).

Why Is Insulating Your Windows Important?

If your windows are not properly insulated, you may as well have a hole in the side of your house. If you can imagine a hole on the side of your home, it’s pretty easy to visualize the massive amounts of heat escaping, water invading, and cold air flowing into your home.

You can buy the best windows in the world, but if they’re not insulated or installed properly, they will not do their job:

  • They will not keep your home sealed away from the weather
  • They will not maintain your home’s internal climate control
  • They will not keep you warm in the winter
  • They will not keep you cool in the summer

How Should Your Windows Be Insulated?

While it’s important to note that not every house is the same and, as a result, may require slightly different window insulation setups – in general, these guidelines are a good place to start.

If the space you’re trying to insulate in or around your windows is…

Less than an inch – You should insulate the space with a minimally expanding foam. People might also refer to this type of window insulation foam as slow-expanding urethane foam or closed-cell foam.

More than an inch – You should insulate the space with fiberglass. However, remember not to compress fiberglass during installation. If you compress or squish fiberglass, it won’t expand to fill the space it’s supposed to insulate, which allows air to flow through and defeats the purpose of insulation.

Just the right amount of insulation: It’s also important not to use too much insulation. While you want to fill any open spaces in and around your windows with the proper insulation, you don’t want to pack these spaces tight. All houses and products expand and contract, so you need to allow for this natural movement.

Insulating Window Weight Pockets

If you have old windows or you’ve replaced old windows with newer windows – you may have weight pockets.

What’s a weight pocket? Old windows used to move – and stay – up and down thanks to a pulley and a counterweight. If you live in an older home, then there’s a space around your windows that once housed the pulley and counterweight called the weight pocket.

the-old-house-journal (image credit: Washington State Historic Preservation) https://www.dahp.wa.gov/window-preservation-guidance

If you have old windows and often feel drafts or struggle to keep those rooms at consistent temperatures, your weight pockets might not be insulated at all. Many contractors choose not to insulate weight pockets to keep prices and labor costs down.

Understanding Air Infiltration

Drafty windows are a major cause of high energy bills and uneven indoor temperatures. In fact, they can allow up to 30% of your home’s heat to escape. Air infiltration refers to outside air flowing into your home. One common entry point, for example, is through inefficient windows.

This leads to your HVAC system working in overdrive, as your energy bills steadily increase throughout the seasons. While it’s nearly impossible to eliminate 100% of air infiltration through your windows, there are energy efficient window options that can reduce drafts almost completely.

How Does Air Infiltration Enter the Home Through Your Windows?

There are several entry points of air infiltration through drafty windows. As you can see from the following diagram, airflow enters your home through the sash, the sash meeting the rail, the sash parameter, and the sill.

Air Infiltration Windows

Inefficient window design and poor quality installation can result in air infiltration, drafty windows, and high energy bills. If you’re experiencing unwanted drafts and high energy bills in your home, the good news is that you don’t have to fight an endless battle with your thermostat.

The Key to Fixing Drafty Windows (For Good)

You should upgrade outdated and drafty windows with high-quality replacement windows. Over time, windows lose their ability to block air infiltration, and repairing seals or applying new caulking only serves as a Band-Aid solution. People generally use caulk to seal cracks and openings between stationary house components like door and window frames, while they use weather-stripping to seal moving parts, such as doors and operable windows.

Coastal Windows & Exteriors reduces drafts significantly with our industry leading energy efficient windows. This type of window design isolates air infiltration hot spots and seals them off minimizing energy loss.

dura sill window design

When you get your windows installed by Coastal Windows & Exteriors, they will be 23 times more airtight than the industry average CFM rating—specifically compared to residential wood double hung windows.

Our windows only allow .01 CFM of air leakage per minute which is equivalent to less than .8 soda cans of air per minute, while competitors such as Pella and Andersen windows allow .12 to .30 CFM per minute which is equivalent to 24 soda cans of air per minute.

To put our windows’ performance into perspective, it would take a combined 23 windows from Coastal to leak the same amount of air as 1 window from our major competitors. This means that Coastal’s windows are more efficient at blocking air infiltration while keeping your energy bills as low as possible—and the proof is in our CFM numbers.

How Should Your Windows And Building Envelope Be Sealed Together?

Once your windows have been placed and insulated, you still need to make sure that they are correctly sealed to your home’s building envelope. Your home’s building envelope is essentially your home’s shield against the weather. If there are any gaps or holes in your home’s building envelope, then there are opportunities for energy to escape and troublesome moisture to get in.

The best way to seal your windows into your home’s building envelope is with caulking. There are different kinds of caulk for different home sealing situations, the best kind of caulk to use for sealing windows on the outside of your home is a construction grade silicone caulk. And the best kind of caulk to use for sealing windows on the inside of your home is a paintable butyl.

Why Do Your Windows Matter In The Winter?

Drafty windows and doors are the single biggest source of home energy loss. As much as 40% of your home’s energy loss occurs due to poorly insulated windows and doors. This equates to high energy bills and money wasted.

In an ideal world, your home has fully insulated energy efficient windows that are designed to be more thermally efficient and keep your home warm in the winter. If you don’t, just remember that a window is only as good as its insulation and installation.

Not sure if your windows are properly insulated and sealed? Feel around your trim for drafts or give us a call and we’ll come out with our temp gun. We can tell you if your windows are properly insulated and sealed.


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