Seamless Vinyl Siding Can Offer Many Advantages

Replacing the siding on your home can dramatically change its appearance for the better and improve its exterior durability. If you choose seamless vinyl siding, you will also reduce the amount of maintenance you need to do, while increasing the resale value of the house.

What Is Vinyl Siding?

The majority of siding used to be made from painted aluminum until vinyl siding was invented during the 1960s. Vinyl has had a number of advantages over aluminum siding:

  • vinyl siding does not rot, corrode, flake, peel, or dent
  • in comparison with aluminum siding, vinyl siding is highly durable
  • vinyl siding needs relatively little maintenance
  • vinyl siding can be produced in a wider variety of colors and finishes, expanding customer choice

What Is Seamless Vinyl Siding?

Since the 1960s, vinyl siding has constantly been improved upon in terms of its appearance and practicality. Conventional vinyl panels overlap each other at frequent intervals, producing seams. These seams have several disadvantages:

  • insects can use them as a breeding place and infest your house
  • they can allow water to penetrate the building
  • it is possible for wind to get behind them and tear off the siding
  • they produce a patchwork effect that can obscure architectural details

Seamless vinyl siding reduces these problems by removing most of the seams. This is achieved by producing seamless vinyl siding in much longer lengths than is usual--around 40 feet rather than 12 feet--more than three times the length of normal vinyl siding.

Seamless vinyl siding offers many advantages over traditional vinyl siding, and may be just what you need when you replace your siding.