Bark side: face in or face out – DCI Products RafterVent User Manual

Page 6

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6

spacer mats, I install blocking as a base
for the band boards, just like the corner
boards (Figure 5, page 5).

Regardless of the material used to cre-

ate the vent space, you still need to install
drip cap flashing over horizontal trim. But
don’t run the drip cap all the way to the
wall sheathing over the band boards.
Doing so will break the continuity of the
airflow. Instead, treat the cap flashing like
a Z flashing, as shown in Figure 5. Its
main function is to redirect water that
enters at the siding/trim joint back out
and protect the top edge of the band
board. Run the “wall” leg of the flashing
over the face of the rain screen so air can
freely flow from intake to exhaust.

Windows and doors. Over windows

and doors, the flashing practice is differ-
ent. Run cap flashings all the way to the
wall sheathing and integrate with the
housewrap (Figure 6). Any water draining
in the vent space will drain out over the
drip cap. Be sure to leave a

3

/

8

-inch air

space between the bottom of the shingles

and the cap flashing for air circulation.
And remember to provide insect screens
on the rain-screen material.

Keeping the vent space thickness down

to

1

/

4

to

3

/

8

inch doesn’t pose much of a

problem. However, if thicker drainage

mats or battens are used (

3

/

4

inch, for

instance), the windows and doors will
need to be padded out. The simplest fix is
to mount spacer blocks around the rough
openings that equal the thickness of what-
ever spacer material you’re using. Some

March/April 2007

~

CoastalContractor

Window Flange on Nailers

Window Flange on Sheathing

Self-adhesive
flashing

Housewrap

Plastic battens

Metal Z flashing

Metal Z
flashing

Plastic battens

Sill flashing

Self-adhesive
flashing

Housewrap

Housewrap
under nailer

Housewrap
under sill
flashing

Plywood or
OSB nailer

Plywood or
OSB nailer

Sill flashing

BARK SIDE: FACE

IN

OR FACE OUT?

While most red cedar shingles are milled vertical grain, white cedar shingles are

usually cut flat grained. Many installers like to face the shingles “bark-side out”

hoping that the shingles will be less likely to curl at the outside edges and stay

flat on the wall. Checking every shingle’s growth rings is an extra time-consuming

step, though, and I’ve given up on the practice. Although I don’t have a study to

back up my position, I’ve noticed that I end up with many fewer curled shingles

since I began applying them over vented rain screens. I speculate that shingle

curling has more to do with the concentration of moisture inside a shingle than

with the ring orientation. Shingles will tend to curl toward the “dry side.” When

shingles are applied directly over a sheathed wall, the sun will drive moisture

toward the back (cooler) surface. Shingles applied over a rain-screen space will

be able to dry more readily, reducing the excess moisture built up on the back

surface and thereby reducing curling.

— M.G.

FIGURE 6.

The best way to handle

the exterior trim is to mount the

window flange on furring strips

(far left). The alternative is to fur

out for the window trim after the

window is installed (left), which

works with a

1

/

4

-inch to

3

/

8

-inch

spacer material.

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