Wood Panel Siding
Tips from Real-Estate-Agents.com
reprinted courtesy of ServiceMagic.com
This information can clarify
and help answer some questions.
Styles of wood panel siding:
- Plywood is standard pressed wood in larger sheets and usually
a plain pattern.
- Hardboard lap is an inexpensive composite lap siding often
found covering the exteriors of track homes.
- Lapped wood looks like solid wood lap siding and consists
of pieces of lap boards stacking on each other in a regular horizontal
pattern.
- Ship lap is another horizontal pattern with tight joints
similar to tongue and groove, but it laps over.
- Channel, a lap type of siding also called "channel rustic,"
has a pattern of one-inch wide grooves spaced out every eight
inches.
- Tongue and groove is a pattern of boards (six, seven or 10
inches wide) that fit and lock together at the edges.
- Board and batten is a piece of cedar or fir sheet plywood
that has a one- by two-inch strip attached to it every six or
eight inches apart.
- Split log looks like a log cabin exterior.
-- Tips courtesy of Service Magic