Caulking & Extrusions
Caulking & extrusions join your building’s components together, allowing for movement while also keeping water out. A crucial element to your building envelope, when they fail or wear out, it creates an environment for mold and water damage.
We recommend inspecting your caulking & extrusions every 7-10 years, or more frequently if they are subject to impact or chemical damage.
Why Invest In Caulking & Extrusions
A critical bond that joins your building’s components together,
they are as vital to your building’s construction as concrete, glass, or wood.
Caulking is a flexible adhesive material used to connect different building materials while still allowing movement between sections of the structure. It can also be extruded into dimensional shapes to uniformly bridge over critical intersections, making for a very technical installation.
To ensure your installation is done correctly the first time, you want to make sure your installation team knows:
The optimal joint geometry. You don’t want the sealant to be too thick (it won’t flex) or too thin (it won’t last).
How to prepare the joint properly. If the new sealant does not have a strong bond to the substrate, it will fail prematurely, and you will have to pay to do the work again.
Without proper care and maintenance, caulking can deteriorate faster than usual. We recommend inspecting your caulking every 7-10 years; however, the lifetime of your caulking is dependent on the building and environmental factors.
Urethane sealants should be inspected every 10 years, and silicone sealants should be inspected every 15 years.
Depending on exposure to UV rays or other environmental factors, damage may occur sooner than expected.
High-traffic areas or areas subject to impact or chemical damage should be inspected more often as well.
Often times, it is expensive to get in place to access the caulking at panel joints and windows. Typically, it is more cost-effective to replace entire sections than to do a spot repair, instead of paying again to get in the same place to do another section 5 feet away.
Pro tip: Don’t forget to tell your installation team if the caulking needs to be painted. This has design impacts when it comes to building expansion joints. Silicone sealants, for example, can only be painted with silicone coatings.
Types of Buildings We Work On
SUCCESS STORIES
We protect your building envelope from the elements
Services
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This is a sealant (typically silicone) used to adhere and secure building components, like glass panes on a glass curtainwall building.
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When original rubber window gaskets wear out over time, they are commonly replaced with a cant bead of silicone sealant, called a “wet seal.”
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These are the joints between building components like panel edges, window perimeters, or expansion joints at floorlines. These building joints, caulked with either silicone or urethane sealants, typically allow for building movement.
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These joints in the building’s hardscaping are predominantly horizontal. You need to use the right caulking and backing here to provide flexibility and be watertight, but also resist the point load of foot traffic (especially high heels!).
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Silicone sealant can be extruded into rolls of tape to provide a consistent sealant width over joints that are joined together. Silicone tape can also be notched or grooved to wrap around edges.
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In addition to flat tape extrusion, dimensional shapes can be made using a mold. These are often used at window mullion intersections.