Showing posts with label Flower Mound. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Flower Mound. Show all posts

Saturday, September 3, 2016

Vinyl Replacement Windows to Replace Steel Casement Bow Windows

Vinyl Replacement Windows to Replace Steel Casement Bow Windows

Start to finish window installation in Dallas Texas for a new updated look on a 50's era home.

This is a 50's era steel casement with putty glazed single pane glass.Alside Vinyl Casement Replacement Window


These are interesting.  When I get one it's always a little complicated.  Sheetrock work needed inside where the sides change.  Brick mason needed to straighten out the bottoms.  In this case, everything had to come up an inch and a half as the openings were 74 and casements max out at 72 inches tall.


 Here are some before, during and after shots.  the cans and trash were in the wall when we opened it up.  Old builders did strange stuff sometimes.



This steel casement window was typical of the 50's






















Tuesday, February 17, 2015




So the discussion has come up as to if casement windows and vertical operators (single hungs and double hungs) look alike.

There's no easy way to say no they don't but it's okay.  That is my take on it though.

Here are some examples:


This is a double casement.  Both sides swing out for ventilation.  The outside has a very flat beveled look to it with what's designed to look like a putty glazed, 45 degree angle to the glass.


This is the NT Window Presidential Vinyl Replacement Window.  It has a cove moulding look to the outside profile that sticks out past the face of the window frame.

This is a close up of the casement window.


Again this is a casement seen in the above shot.


This is a single hung archtop with a profile that is almost the opposite of the casement on close examination.  






Saturday, December 27, 2014

Getting a Model Home Discount on your home improvements.

The Model Home Discount in Home Improvements

Lot's of people like to do their research on the internet.  That's a given.  Most of my customers find me while looking me up on Google.  My site is on page one of most of the relevant search terms I like to have.

Dallas Windows, Vinyl Windows Dallas, Replacement Windows Dallas and various other phrases including Wood or Aluminum.   Long story short, I have pretty low overhead.  No shop.  Just a service that I provide.  Installation of residential replacement windows and pre-hung doors with an occasional patio door here and there.

I worked for a big multi-million dollar window and door company that sold replacement windows for a thousand dollars a piece in the 90's.  In many ways they were worth it.  Today it's not the best choice but for millions of homeowners it was.

The reason I am revisiting my window installation past at this juncture is that I just read a post from a notable site with reviews and such on it that I sorta disagree with.

This is an opportunity to see a real simple contrast in overviews from two different seasoned window guys.

I have a friend in Richmond Virginia.  A new friend but not a competitor.  Very down to earth.  You can tell in his writings.   He put up a post on the Model Home Sales Pitch you sometimes hear about.  As he so aptly points out.  It was hilarious in Tin Men with Danny DeVito.

The premise is that a contractor or company comes to you with a deal for being a model home.

His post is here and you can give it a look :

http://thewindowdog.com/model-home-windows-program-window-scams/

Now here's why I think it's sorta cynical.   If a contractor has nothing going for himself, his products and craftsmanship besides a "model home discount" of course you should never do business with them.  Thats just good common sense.

That said, I'll sometimes bid a job a bit lower to get my foot into a good neighborhood.  I know my work is beautiful and neighbors who see it will be tempted to want some.  I don't see that as unreasonable or as he seems to implicate "a scam".  Bottom line is that you should get a few estimates and always look for someone you can trust with your money, your home and your project, because they will end up being responsible for all three.

Often that's not a cheap guy.  I don't even try to be the cheap guy.  That leads to the budget being too tight and product or quality of labor diminish.  The trade off isn't worth it.

No one needs the cheapest car at the Carmax.  Most of us need something dependable in the middle of the cost spectrum.  None of us expect a good car for a thousand bucks.  None of us like spending Thirty to Fifty Grand on one either.   There are reasonable choices in the middle of the two extremes.

Back to the model home discount.  If that's the only thing they have to offer you to win your business you should probably keep looking.   If someone offers you something like that it's probably not a scam, but it is certainly a gimmick.