Best-practice wall shingles, Corner-board detail – DCI Products RafterVent User Manual

Page 5

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5

part is starting the first two courses at the
bottom; but once they are secured, the
rest of the corner shingles go fine.

Corner boards. Ideally, corner boards

and other trim elements should be
applied over the rain-screen space. They
benefit from the drainage and “back-vent-
ing” just like the shingles. Plus, installing
the trim over the vent material keeps it in
the same plane as the shingles. However,
this is practical only over battens. Over
the less stable spacer mats, the corner
boards are hard to line up.

One way to deal with this is to apply

1

/

4

-inch plywood or OSB spacers to the

building corner, which provides solid nail-
ing and a vent space (Figure 4). I use
4-inch-wide plywood or OSB spacers posi-
tioned 12 to 24 inches apart up both sides
of each building corner. I cut the block
width

1

/

2

inch greater than the corner-

board width and snap vertical plumb chalk
lines over the blocks that give me a refer-
ence for aligning the corner boards. These
spacer blocks are easier to install before
the matrix mat is installed. There’s no

need to cut the mats around the blocks
either — just trim at the outside edge.

Horizontal band boards or skirt

boards present a similar challenge. I treat
them the same as corner boards. With bat-

tens, I run one strip at the bottom and
one at the top, which is placed so half the
batten supports the top edge of the board
and the other half is exposed to support
the first course of shingles. When using

Best-Practice
Wall Shingles

March/April 2007

~

CoastalContractor

Corner-Board Detail

End rain-screen mat
at chalk line here

Spaced

1

/

4

" to

3

/

8

"

OSB or plywood blocks

Rain-screen
mat

Corner board

Apply housewrap
on wall first

Midwall
band board

Housewrap

Rain-screen mat

Skirt board

Skirt board

Midwall
band board

DCI CedarVent includes
insect-blocking fabric

Spaced

1

/

4

" to

3

/

8

" OSB

or plywood blocks

Plastic
battens

Z flashing

Z flashing

Screen under blocks
protects against insects

FIGURE 4.

Corner boards should be

applied over a rain screen just

like the siding. While this is rela-

tively easy with battens, installing

trim over a spacer mat is more

difficult because the pliable mat

doesn’t provide a stable nailing

base. To make it easier, the

author installs

1

/

4

-inch OSB spac-

ers to the building corner before

the matrix mat is installed.

FIGURE 5.

Skirt boards over

a spacer mat also get

1

/

4

-

inch plywood or OSB

blocks (far left), while bat-

tens are simply spaced so

half the batten is above

the top edge of the skirt

board (left). In both cases,

a drip cap flashing must

be installed over the hori-

zontal trim board, but this

flashing should not extend

to the sheathing so it will

not disrupt airflow.

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