Best-practice wall shingles, Exhaust vent into soffit vent frieze board, Resources – DCI Products RafterVent User Manual

Page 7

Advertising
background image

7

builders don’t like this solution because it
requires extension jambs to pad the win-
dow and door jambs flush with drywall on
the inside. But if you’re framing 2x6 walls,
or using windows with 2

1

/

4

-inch-deep

jambs in a 2x4 wall, then you’re ripping
extension jambs anyway, so there’s no
extra labor and minimal materials.

EXHAUST-VENT DETAILING

Don’t forget to provide a route for the
rain-screen vent space to exhaust along
the top. I’ve used two different details:

Frieze-board vents require only a little

advance planning and can be incorpo-
rated after the soffit board has been
installed. Leave a

1

/

2

-inch space between

the last batten and the soffit board, and
cut the top of the shingles about

1

/

2

inch

short of the soffit as well (Figure 7).
Then use blocks approximately

3

/

8

inch

thick to space the frieze board off the sur-
face of the shingles. In order to keep the
frieze plumb, I rip tapered blocks to apply

over the shingles at 16-inch centers. Air
flows freely between the rain-screen
space and the space behind the frieze.

Vented soffit. With a little more plan-

ning, you can eliminate these tapered
spacers, and just let the rain screen
exhaust into a vented soffit. Cut the soffit
board

1

/

2

to

3

/

4

inch narrower than the

fascia-to-wall dimension, so there’s a gap
between the back edge of the soffit board
and the wall sheathing. This allows you to
run the rain-screen material right up to
the soffit space, and the frieze board will
conceal the gap. Air can then flow freely
from the rain-screen vent space and into
the soffit.

~

Mike Guertin (www.mikeguertin.com) is a
custom home builder and remodeler in
East Greenwich, R.I., and a member of
the JLC Live Construction Demonstration
Team leading sidewall shingling work-
shops. All photos by the author.
Illustrations by Chuck Lockhart.

Best-Practice
Wall Shingles

March/April 2007

~

CoastalContractor

RESOURCES

SPACER MATS

Enkamat, www.colbond-usa.com

Home Slicker, www.benjamin

obdyke.com

Waterway, www.stucoflex.com

PLASTIC BATTENS

Battens Plus, www.battensplus.com

Cor-A-Vent, www.cor-a-vent.com

CedarVent & RafterVent,
www.dciproducts.com/html/

cedarvent.htm

Exhaust Vent into Soffit

Vent Frieze Board

Soffit

Rain-screen
mat

Plastic
battens

Plastic
battens

Rain-screen
mat

Insect screen

Frieze board

Spaced tapered
blocks

Frieze
board

Spaced
tapered
blocks

FIGURE 7.

The vent space in a rain screen needs an air exhaust along the top. This can be detailed in two

ways: (1) by venting the space into the soffit (above left), or (2) by using a vented frieze board (above right).

Advertising