Masonry Magazine March 2012 Page. 29

Words: Jared Kennison
Masonry Magazine March 2012 Page. 29

Masonry Magazine March 2012 Page. 29
MASONRY COMPUTER ESTIMATING
TRADESMEN'S SOFTWARE, Inc.
HOS3DE
ON SCREEN 3D ESTIMATOR
TM

# DRIP DIVERTS WATER FROM FACE OF WALL

Figure 1.

CMU walls can be filled with reinforcing steel and grout. As such, they can also function as load-bearing walls. Water must be resisted at the outside face of these walls. Sometimes, water repellents and masonry sealers are used. Flashings are provided at the same locations as in veneer construction. However, single-wythe walls do not have a drainage cavity other than the inside voids in the CMU or brick. Therefore, water has many locations where it can be absorbed or can bridge across the width of the masonry veneer to the building interior.

# Flashing components
IN ORDER TO UNDERSTAND how to properly flash a masonry wall, a review of terms both commonplace and specific to vertical walls should be given consideration.

# Drips
DRIPS ARE IMPORTANT because they divert water away from the surface of the wall (see Figure 1). These become more critical with flat wall surfaces. Older buildings used masonry components such as ledges and water tables to divert water that flowed down the surface of the building away from the exterior walls. Many times, drips are opposed by the designer for aesthetic reasons. When flashings are specified to be terminated within the face of the masonry veneer and not "daylighted" to the exterior, water may flow off of the edge of the flashing and be retained within the wall.

# Weeps
THE MOST COMMON TYPES of weeps are plastic tubes and prefabricated plastic or mesh materials that are placed in head joints (vertical mortar joints). Effective weeps can also be provided by leaving head joints open. However, weeps also create openings where wind-driven rain can enter the wall and thus expose the flashing to more water. The wall flashings have to be installed well to prevent potential water intrusion from creating a problem. If the wall surface will be exposed to wind-driven rain, such as at upper stories of buildings or at coastal locations, the weeps should be turned downward or otherwise baffled to prevent water from entering. Plastic weep tubes with downward curvatures can be used. Prefabricated mesh materials placed in mortar head joints in lieu of mortar look nice on paper but have limitations in the www.masonrymagazine.com

Masonry Computer Estimating
That Does It All ... in 3D!

Utilize Tradesmen's 30 masonry take-off for BIM models. Just point and click on the digital blueprint and see your walls displayed. Our On Screen 30 Estimator makes it simple and fast. Runs on Windows PCs and Bootcamp/Windows on Intel Macs. Support available 7 days a week. See the actual building being displayed in 3D as you do your take-off in either PLAN mode, PERSPECTIVE mode, OUTSIDE mode, INSIDE mode or at any ELEVATION. Complete your take-off, then walk through or around and see the actual finished building(s). Calculates CMU: HALF and FULL BULLNOSE, DOUBLE BULLNOSE, CHAMFER, or SASH for any or all OPENINGS, JAMBS, CORNERS, CONTROL JOINTS and any SPECIAL CUTS. Integrate with Accounting Software and transfer data to Microsoft Excel. 30 day money-back guarantee.

Negotiating projects with a 3D image will win you more contracts and enhance your professional image.

TRADESMEN'S SOFTWARE, Inc.
1-800-494-4899
See for yourself at:
www.tradesmens.com
READER SERVICE #163
March 2012
MASONRY 27


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