FGIA Fall Conference Presenters Share Technical Training, Education Expertise
Several training and education opportunities took place during the Fenestration and Glazing Industry Alliance 2024 Fall Conference in Minneapolis, including an informative session on mockup testing in construction, a primer on corrosion, and an educational hands-on workshop demonstrating proper application of materials common in fenestration installation, as presented by the FGIA Wall Interface Council.
Construction mockups and testing
A presentation entitled, "Construction Mockups & Testing | Overview, Trends, and Best Practices" was led by Christopher Grey, a principal in the Simpson Gumpertz & Heger building enclosures division in Boston. “Mockups allow you to understand real-life conditions and enforce lessons learned throughout,” says Grey. “You can work out bugs early.”
Grey shared that there are several different types of construction mockups, including laboratory (off-site), preconstruction (stand-alone), in-situ (on-building) and digital. Laboratory ones are typically for unique systems. “A laboratory mockup can help one identify water leakage locations so one can find the cause and course correct,” says Grey. With stand-alone mockups, one can customize small and large projects and conduct smaller scale tests on or near site. “You can understand visual versus performance and meet specific jurisdictional requirements,” says Grey. “You can test the fenestration products, the wall assembly and cladding and the entire mockup.” In-situ mockups are for all project types and smaller scale tests with unique conditions on the building. Finally, digital mockups are also for all project types. They vary in size and use. “There is no performance testing available yet, but you can use this to try out unique conditions,” says Grey.
Mockups can help you understand real-life conditions. “They are not just a quality assurance program,” says Grey. When implementing mockups, be vigilant throughout, starting early, he adds. “Specify and detail mockups in documents,” Grey says. “Get your contractor's advice. Use available tools to mitigate potential risk at various phases of a project.”
Introduction to corrosion
Another session called "Introduction to Corrosion" was presented by Victoria Gelling, senior research fellow at Sherwin-Williams. She shared the science behind how corrosion is caused. “How do we stop corrosion? We don't,” she says. “But coatings can slow water, salts and oxygen from reaching the surface of the metal. All non-noble metals will eventually corrode.”
Corrosion is an electrochemical process occurring at metal/electrolyte interface, says Gelling. “Think of it as refining in reverse,” she says. “To stop corrosion, stop having a place for those electrons to go.” Multiple factors impact corrosion rates, including pH, oxygen availability, salts, contaminants, temperature, oxide layer properties, applied potential (voltage) and time of wetness. Important factors are pH, oxygen and temperature. “Steel doesn't care what pH you're at,” she says, adding that “changes in pH of an electrolyte will not impact corrosion rate of iron as much as it will the corrosion rate of aluminum alloys.”
In conclusion, corrosion and its accurate measurement is a complex subject, says Gelling. “It's a constantly evolving area, with new materials, substrates, pretreatments and industry needs entering the marketplace.”
Wall interface hands-on workshop
A hands-on workshop demonstrated six different processes thanks to volunteers from five companies, all of whom displayed the proper process of applying materials during fenestration installation.
- Proper application of liquid applied flashing – Pat Downey, Prosoco
- Compatibility of materials and common signs of incompatibility – Guy Long, Prosoco
- Flashing application focused on weatherboard sequencing – Rod Calkum, Aquatech Consultancy Inc.
- Proper use of a J-Roller for self-adhering flashing – Eric Seaverson, Intertek
- Sealant joints, types of joints, proper joint design – Bill Longo, Dap Global Inc.
- Gunnable sealant and quality control for mixing two-component sealants – Steve Altum, Dow Performance Silicones