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Tips on Choosing Storm Windows To Protect Your Home and Your Family

Sun 10 Dec 2006 - 20:03

Tips on Choosing Storm Windows To Protect Your Home and Your Family
By Peter T. Wilson

If you live inland from the Gulf Coast, you can be sure to face a hurricane at some point. This means facing high winds of 100mph, rain, aftermath tornadoes, toppled trees, flying roofs, and blown out windows.

Learning to adapt and protect yourself is the way of life for people in these areas. Blocking windows and doors with plywood as a protective sheet in order to keep all of the above mentioned from harming them or their families is what these people have learned to do.

It's no doubt that lumber yards and their suppliers love this season since they do great business in these times. If you're a procrastinator you'll see that waiting is going to cost you since prices may jump to incredible amounts at this dire time. It's not an easy life, boarding up windows as quickly as possible, making your house look terrible, and then having to rip it all down shortly after in order to lead a normal life.

However, there is a much better way, and many people have now figured this out. They've learned that hurricane shutters and storm windows are a more viable option, plus decrease a huge amount of labor along the way. These stay on throughout the year, being a decorative fixture to fit your homes theme. Closing these shutters or windows is a lot easier than the alternative mentioned above.

Here are some of your hurricane window protection options.

Exterior hurricane shutters can be conformed to fit your homes decorations and theme, while providing ample protection from bolting debris, and the high winds that bolt them. This is also a good security option for keeping intruders at bay. If you're handy you could even construct these yourself with some wood.

Rolling shutters are also a good protective option. These are usually make from aluminum, or better yet a heavy low maintenance vinyl. They can be used to control the light admitted into your home on nice days, and closed to block wind and debris on stormy ones.

If you're handy you could easily construct rolling shutters yourself as well.

And last but not least are actual storm windows, also known these days as hurricane windows. A storm window is made with double paned glass that has a protection strip between the panes. This strip will stay in place during the event that the glass shatters leaving you with a continued protection from debris and wind.

No storm is fun, but they're a fact of life for a lot of people. For this reason being prepared is your best bet of weathering any storm safely and securely.

The magazine writer Peter J. Wilson is very interested in issues corresponding to hurricane repair and storm protection. You can see his writings on storm windows over at http://www.replacement-windows-tips.com/storm-windows.html and other sources for storm windows knowledge.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Peter_T._Wilson


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