Ways To Lessen Your Carbon Foot Print With Sash Window Draught Proofing

| Thursday, March 15, 2012
By Glen Middleston


Living in a house with older windows has its good points and bad. The windows may be classically beautiful with lots of character but they are also old and have most likely become less efficient and functional with age. It is easy to reduce your carbon foot print with sash window draught proofing.

You have probably seen advertisements from window replacement shops touting how great new window technology has become. Their position is that it is best to remove older sash windows and to replace them with new, 'modern' units. They offer double-paned, gas-filled vinyl (plastic) framed windows as the alternative.

The best advice regarding older windows is to repair whenever possible and to replace only if absolutely necessary. Old windows are almost always worth saving and, with proper restoration, can be made to look and operate as they were designed to. And new, modern windows do not really look good on an older house.

Windows on older houses were built to last as long as the house and it is still standing, is it not true? But old windows require maintenance in order to function properly. As they age, things wear out and need to be replaced or repaired. If you have really old windows you may have never experienced them working properly. But that can be fixed rather easily.

It could be something as simple as scraping away a few dozen coats of paint. More likely the sash cords need to be replaced or the counter-weights are out of balance. The single most beneficial thing you can do for your windows, however, is to draught-proof them.

It is easy and cost-effective to reduce your carbon foot print with sash window draught proofing. Not only will a proper job stop the draughts but it will also minimize dust and noise. It will even help eliminate rattling of the panes. It will help the heat stay in during winter and stay out during summer. It's a very sound strategy.




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