When is it necessary to paint a wooden fascia (barge) board?












1















Context: a Florida roof and gutter is to be replaced, however the fascia wood was rotten and replaced. The plan is to be covered by aluminum fascia and has a drip edge.




  1. When does it make sense to paint the wood boards?

  2. Does it make sense to paint if Aluminum fascia is to be nailed to the board?


The goal is to have the building ready for the gutter craftsman.



enter image description here










share|improve this question





























    1















    Context: a Florida roof and gutter is to be replaced, however the fascia wood was rotten and replaced. The plan is to be covered by aluminum fascia and has a drip edge.




    1. When does it make sense to paint the wood boards?

    2. Does it make sense to paint if Aluminum fascia is to be nailed to the board?


    The goal is to have the building ready for the gutter craftsman.



    enter image description here










    share|improve this question



























      1












      1








      1








      Context: a Florida roof and gutter is to be replaced, however the fascia wood was rotten and replaced. The plan is to be covered by aluminum fascia and has a drip edge.




      1. When does it make sense to paint the wood boards?

      2. Does it make sense to paint if Aluminum fascia is to be nailed to the board?


      The goal is to have the building ready for the gutter craftsman.



      enter image description here










      share|improve this question
















      Context: a Florida roof and gutter is to be replaced, however the fascia wood was rotten and replaced. The plan is to be covered by aluminum fascia and has a drip edge.




      1. When does it make sense to paint the wood boards?

      2. Does it make sense to paint if Aluminum fascia is to be nailed to the board?


      The goal is to have the building ready for the gutter craftsman.



      enter image description here







      roofing gutters fascia






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Mar 23 at 14:33







      gatorback

















      asked Mar 23 at 14:23









      gatorbackgatorback

      7372721




      7372721






















          1 Answer
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          active

          oldest

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          2














          Exposed wood must always be sealed in some fashion unless it's chemically treated or of a species that's rot-resistant (cedar, teak, etc.). Even then it tends to preserve the aesthetics of wood to paint, oil, or varnish it.



          Metal fascia is commonly installed right over "subfascia" (raw SPF 2x6 lumber).
          If everything is installed correctly it should never see water.






          share|improve this answer
























          • Thanks isherwood. Is it possible to determine (visual inspection) if the wood is chemically treated? Ideally it would be possible to look at the photo and determine if it has been treated. I think that you are indicating that if the wood is treated, that the aluminum fascia is nailed to the wood and is ready for the gutter crew?

            – gatorback
            Mar 23 at 14:32






          • 1





            It'll be unnaturally green or brown, and it'll be wet and heavy when you buy it.

            – isherwood
            Mar 23 at 14:33













          • @isherwood I have no idea about the US timber industry, but in the UK pressure-treated timber is certainly not "wet and heavy". It has the same moisture content as untreated timber when sold. Lower quality dipped timber may have more moisture, but the cheaper initial price is usually less cost-effective because its lifetime is shorter.

            – alephzero
            Mar 23 at 16:05











          • @alephzero, are you saying that the lumber manufacturers dry the lumber again after it's pressure treated in vats of liquid?

            – isherwood
            Mar 23 at 17:31












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          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes








          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          2














          Exposed wood must always be sealed in some fashion unless it's chemically treated or of a species that's rot-resistant (cedar, teak, etc.). Even then it tends to preserve the aesthetics of wood to paint, oil, or varnish it.



          Metal fascia is commonly installed right over "subfascia" (raw SPF 2x6 lumber).
          If everything is installed correctly it should never see water.






          share|improve this answer
























          • Thanks isherwood. Is it possible to determine (visual inspection) if the wood is chemically treated? Ideally it would be possible to look at the photo and determine if it has been treated. I think that you are indicating that if the wood is treated, that the aluminum fascia is nailed to the wood and is ready for the gutter crew?

            – gatorback
            Mar 23 at 14:32






          • 1





            It'll be unnaturally green or brown, and it'll be wet and heavy when you buy it.

            – isherwood
            Mar 23 at 14:33













          • @isherwood I have no idea about the US timber industry, but in the UK pressure-treated timber is certainly not "wet and heavy". It has the same moisture content as untreated timber when sold. Lower quality dipped timber may have more moisture, but the cheaper initial price is usually less cost-effective because its lifetime is shorter.

            – alephzero
            Mar 23 at 16:05











          • @alephzero, are you saying that the lumber manufacturers dry the lumber again after it's pressure treated in vats of liquid?

            – isherwood
            Mar 23 at 17:31
















          2














          Exposed wood must always be sealed in some fashion unless it's chemically treated or of a species that's rot-resistant (cedar, teak, etc.). Even then it tends to preserve the aesthetics of wood to paint, oil, or varnish it.



          Metal fascia is commonly installed right over "subfascia" (raw SPF 2x6 lumber).
          If everything is installed correctly it should never see water.






          share|improve this answer
























          • Thanks isherwood. Is it possible to determine (visual inspection) if the wood is chemically treated? Ideally it would be possible to look at the photo and determine if it has been treated. I think that you are indicating that if the wood is treated, that the aluminum fascia is nailed to the wood and is ready for the gutter crew?

            – gatorback
            Mar 23 at 14:32






          • 1





            It'll be unnaturally green or brown, and it'll be wet and heavy when you buy it.

            – isherwood
            Mar 23 at 14:33













          • @isherwood I have no idea about the US timber industry, but in the UK pressure-treated timber is certainly not "wet and heavy". It has the same moisture content as untreated timber when sold. Lower quality dipped timber may have more moisture, but the cheaper initial price is usually less cost-effective because its lifetime is shorter.

            – alephzero
            Mar 23 at 16:05











          • @alephzero, are you saying that the lumber manufacturers dry the lumber again after it's pressure treated in vats of liquid?

            – isherwood
            Mar 23 at 17:31














          2












          2








          2







          Exposed wood must always be sealed in some fashion unless it's chemically treated or of a species that's rot-resistant (cedar, teak, etc.). Even then it tends to preserve the aesthetics of wood to paint, oil, or varnish it.



          Metal fascia is commonly installed right over "subfascia" (raw SPF 2x6 lumber).
          If everything is installed correctly it should never see water.






          share|improve this answer













          Exposed wood must always be sealed in some fashion unless it's chemically treated or of a species that's rot-resistant (cedar, teak, etc.). Even then it tends to preserve the aesthetics of wood to paint, oil, or varnish it.



          Metal fascia is commonly installed right over "subfascia" (raw SPF 2x6 lumber).
          If everything is installed correctly it should never see water.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Mar 23 at 14:24









          isherwoodisherwood

          50.8k460129




          50.8k460129













          • Thanks isherwood. Is it possible to determine (visual inspection) if the wood is chemically treated? Ideally it would be possible to look at the photo and determine if it has been treated. I think that you are indicating that if the wood is treated, that the aluminum fascia is nailed to the wood and is ready for the gutter crew?

            – gatorback
            Mar 23 at 14:32






          • 1





            It'll be unnaturally green or brown, and it'll be wet and heavy when you buy it.

            – isherwood
            Mar 23 at 14:33













          • @isherwood I have no idea about the US timber industry, but in the UK pressure-treated timber is certainly not "wet and heavy". It has the same moisture content as untreated timber when sold. Lower quality dipped timber may have more moisture, but the cheaper initial price is usually less cost-effective because its lifetime is shorter.

            – alephzero
            Mar 23 at 16:05











          • @alephzero, are you saying that the lumber manufacturers dry the lumber again after it's pressure treated in vats of liquid?

            – isherwood
            Mar 23 at 17:31



















          • Thanks isherwood. Is it possible to determine (visual inspection) if the wood is chemically treated? Ideally it would be possible to look at the photo and determine if it has been treated. I think that you are indicating that if the wood is treated, that the aluminum fascia is nailed to the wood and is ready for the gutter crew?

            – gatorback
            Mar 23 at 14:32






          • 1





            It'll be unnaturally green or brown, and it'll be wet and heavy when you buy it.

            – isherwood
            Mar 23 at 14:33













          • @isherwood I have no idea about the US timber industry, but in the UK pressure-treated timber is certainly not "wet and heavy". It has the same moisture content as untreated timber when sold. Lower quality dipped timber may have more moisture, but the cheaper initial price is usually less cost-effective because its lifetime is shorter.

            – alephzero
            Mar 23 at 16:05











          • @alephzero, are you saying that the lumber manufacturers dry the lumber again after it's pressure treated in vats of liquid?

            – isherwood
            Mar 23 at 17:31

















          Thanks isherwood. Is it possible to determine (visual inspection) if the wood is chemically treated? Ideally it would be possible to look at the photo and determine if it has been treated. I think that you are indicating that if the wood is treated, that the aluminum fascia is nailed to the wood and is ready for the gutter crew?

          – gatorback
          Mar 23 at 14:32





          Thanks isherwood. Is it possible to determine (visual inspection) if the wood is chemically treated? Ideally it would be possible to look at the photo and determine if it has been treated. I think that you are indicating that if the wood is treated, that the aluminum fascia is nailed to the wood and is ready for the gutter crew?

          – gatorback
          Mar 23 at 14:32




          1




          1





          It'll be unnaturally green or brown, and it'll be wet and heavy when you buy it.

          – isherwood
          Mar 23 at 14:33







          It'll be unnaturally green or brown, and it'll be wet and heavy when you buy it.

          – isherwood
          Mar 23 at 14:33















          @isherwood I have no idea about the US timber industry, but in the UK pressure-treated timber is certainly not "wet and heavy". It has the same moisture content as untreated timber when sold. Lower quality dipped timber may have more moisture, but the cheaper initial price is usually less cost-effective because its lifetime is shorter.

          – alephzero
          Mar 23 at 16:05





          @isherwood I have no idea about the US timber industry, but in the UK pressure-treated timber is certainly not "wet and heavy". It has the same moisture content as untreated timber when sold. Lower quality dipped timber may have more moisture, but the cheaper initial price is usually less cost-effective because its lifetime is shorter.

          – alephzero
          Mar 23 at 16:05













          @alephzero, are you saying that the lumber manufacturers dry the lumber again after it's pressure treated in vats of liquid?

          – isherwood
          Mar 23 at 17:31





          @alephzero, are you saying that the lumber manufacturers dry the lumber again after it's pressure treated in vats of liquid?

          – isherwood
          Mar 23 at 17:31


















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