texcote squares DeHaven Construction Orange County California
Phone: (800) 933 9737 or (714) 647-2339
California only 
Serving Orange & L.A. County California since 1987 
Home | Stucco & Stucco Repair | Interior House Painting / Exterior House Painting | Elastomeric Coatings | Texture Coating (Texcote™) | Free Estimate

DeHaven Construction Company

"Specializing in Stucco, Stucco Repair, Interior Painting, Exterior Painting, Texture Coating (Texcote™) & Elastomeric Coatings"

Energy efficient metal-coated "Super Glass" on dual pane vinyl windows and patio doors cuts Heat Loss

There's a new breed of glass that outperforms just about every window on the market. A double-pane window of this new "super glass" loses up to 42 percent less heat than a standard double-pane window. It's even better than a triple-pane window because it weighs less, costs the same and can save as much or more energy.

This year, most major manufacturers have promoted the super glass in storm windows, as well as patio doors and skylights. It's sold under a zillion different brand names, but it's known generically as low-emissivity glass.

A low-emissivity window or patio door looks like an ordinary window or patio door with double pane glass in it, but there is one key difference: the inside face of the outer pane has a metallic coating that's a mere few hundred atoms thick. This microscopically-thin coating can barely be seen but it stops radiant heat loss by not emitting it to the colt outdoors. Hence the higher R-value of low-emissivity windows.

Not only will your heating bills notice this improvement but you should, too. In winter, your thermostat may be set at a warm 70ºF, yet you'll feel chilled sitting near an ordinary window. Some of that chill may be due to air leaking through its cracks, but some is also due to the radiant heat loss of your warm body to that cold glass. If your windows are skinny single-panes, the room-side surface of that glass is only 14ºF when it's 0ºF outside! If you have ordinary double-pane glass, the room-side glass temperature will be about 41ºF . But with low-emissivity glass, the room side surface will be 51ºF .

For all its benefits, super glass doesn't cost much more than standard windows.

Another type of super glass is known as Heat Mirror. It's based on the same principle of reducing radiant heat loss, but in this case the metallic coating is deposited on a clear plastic film, which is then suspended between two panes of glass. You get a window with two benefits: (1) the insulating value of a triple-pane window and (2) the low-emissivity coating for an R-value of about 4.2.

Heat Mirror was developed at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the 1970s, partly with federal funds, and has been in production since 1981. It is sold to various window makers, who incorporate it in their lines. Three widely-distributed carriers of Heat Mirror are Certainteed, Hurd, and Louisiana-Pacific windows.

When shopping for super glass, look for the longest warranty and the lowest U-value, . window literature generally rates energy performance in terms of U-value. The U-values of super glass vary, depending on the glass manufacturer and the type of coating. The coating can be applied to glass in two ways: by a "pyrolitic" method, while the glass is still molten, and by a "vacuum" method, once the glass is hard. The vacuum method results in a better U-value, but creates handling problems for window manufacturers, and cannot be placed in storm windows.

Projected Energy Costs

H.U.D and U.S. Department of Energy predict a 14.65% energy increase each year for the next 15 years. Residential and commercial windows in the United States leak as much heat every year as is produced by the Alaskan pipeline .

Example:

In 1993 if you were spending $60 per month on heating and cooling, over 12 months that adds up to $720. In 1998, the same amount of energy costs $1,426 dollars. In 2003 the same energy will cost $2,825. Steps taken to insulate your home will save you energy and money.

Monthly bill

$60

$80

$100

$120

$140

$160

$180

$200

Year

2009

$2464 $3286 $4107 $4929 $5750 $6572 $7393 $8214

2010

$2825 $3767 $4709 $5651 $6592 $7534 $8476 $9418

2011

$3239 $4319 $5399 $6479 $7558 $8638 $9718 $10798

2012

$3714 $4952 $6190 $7428 $8666 $9904 $11141 $12379

2013

$4258 $5677 $7096 $8516 $9935 $11354 $12774 $14193

2014

$4882 $6509 $8136 $9763 $11391 $13018 $14645 $16272

Steps taken to make your home more energy efficient, by installing vinyl replacement windows, is money well spent. Today's dual pane vinyl windows are custom made, thermally efficient, have double weather stripping, solar screens, and many other energy saving features.

Our Service Areas

We are proud to serve Orange and L.A. Counties including Aliso Viejo, Anaheim, Brea, Buena Park, Costa Mesa, Coto De Caza, Cypress, Dana Point, Foothill Ranch, Fountain Valley, Fullerton, Garden Grove, Huntington Beach, Irvine, La Habra, Lake Forest, La Palma, Laguna Beach, Laguna Hills, Laguna Niguel, Laguna Woods, Los Alamitos, Mission Viejo, Newport Beach, Orange, Placentia, Rancho Santa Margarita, Rossmoor, San Clemente, San Juan Capistrano, Santa Ana, Seal Beach, Stanton, Sunset Beach, Tustin, Villa Park, Westminster, Yorba Linda, Central Orange County, South Orange County, North Orange County see more of our Service Area >

Submit a Quick Quote today!

Call 800-933-9737 or use this form:

Name:
Email:
Phone:
How can we help?:
Type code here:

 
Home | Stucco & Stucco Repair | Interior House Painting / Exterior House Painting | Elastomeric Coatings | Texture Coating (Texcote™) | Free Estimate
Call us at: (800) 933 9737, (714) 647-2339 California only
Serving Orange County, California since 1987 • Send comments about this site to: info@dehavenconstruction.com
Site Map | Back to Top