Because the existing window frames were all rotted out, removal was a snap. I basically grabbed a hold of the security bars, gave a good pull, and voila. Window removed. There were hundreds of earwigs living between the wood and the concrete, which was exceedingly gross. Not knowing what to do, I grabbed the shop-vac and sucked up the little buggers before they could spread their way throughout the house. Ew.
Next was chipping away at the mortar that had been "holding" in the old window frames. This proved to be a challenge. One side went very smoothly, and the mortar was removed no problem, but the other side, for whatever reason, was much harder and more difficult to chip away. Lesley and I must have spent several hours just chipping enough mortar out that we could get our window in. Unfortunately, we were unable to provide for the recommended 1/2" gap around the window, as that would have meant several more hours of chipping, so we settled for a snug fit. At one point, I thought we would never be able to get enough mortar out, so it was a relief to get out as much as we did.
Once we were satisfied with the opening, it was time to cut the 2x6 and 1x6's to length. This was the easy part. Cutting them to length, and dry fitting them was quick, and before long, Lesley was mixing mortar, and I was cutting dados in the boards.
Mortaring
Rough opening complete
After forty-five minutes or so, the mortar was hard enough for us to proceed with window installation. This was the easy part. The window basically fit like a glove - a tight, racing glove, but a glove nonetheless.
Installed
Fortunately for us, the window went in plumb, level, and square sans shimming, so we were ready to screw it into place. The only shims needed were along the sides due to the planned-for gap, and before long, the window was secured.
Fasten-ating
Windowed
6 comments:
nice work - you guys are motivating. A bit disturbing that your other window popped out so easy, and agreed, earwigs are disgusting. We have millions that live in Finn's PVC toy chest. Hope they're nutritious.
Sean
I hear they're high in cholesterol.
Great work! I am about to install a window frame into a masonry wall also. May I ask about the dados you mentioned cutting into the boards? Are those to give the mortar a place to grab into versus just a flat surface? Thanks!
Yep. Without the dados, the boards would have nothing to grab hold of. By cutting dados, the mortar will squeeze into the grooves and hold the boards firmly.
Thank you!
Also curious, did you nail each board together into a frame and install or did you place each one in individually and rely on the mortar to hold all in place? Thanks again for your time.
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