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Proper Siding Nailing: Why It Determines Longevity and Appearance

Siding nailing technique directly affects how long it looks good and performs. Here's what proper practice looks like.

Siding Installation and Repair

Siding installation fastening is one of the most consequential installation practices — and one of the most commonly done incorrectly. Improper nailing causes buckling, cupping, and premature failure regardless of product quality.

Vinyl siding must be nailed loosely. Vinyl expands and contracts thermally more than wood — approximately 9mm per 3 metres between summer and winter extremes. Nails driven tight prevent this movement, causing buckling in hot weather.

Material Selection Guide

Nail placement in the center of the nail slot, not at the end, allows the required thermal movement in both directions. Nailing at slot ends limits movement to one direction and causes cumulative stress.

Nails must penetrate solid framing or sheathing at the correct depth. Siding fastened only into furring strips or into sheathing alone may have inadequate withdrawal resistance for wind loading.

What the Installation Process Looks Like

Fibre cement siding requires face nailing into framing with corrosion-resistant nails at specified spacings. The nail must be set flush without countersinking (which fractures the board). Fibre cement has no thermal movement provision — tight fastening is required.

Wood siding is traditionally face-nailed at the bottom of each lap. Ring-shank nails provide superior withdrawal resistance in wood siding applications. Pre-drilling near board ends prevents splitting.

Quality inspectors look at every fastener location to confirm consistent pattern, proper depth, and alignment with slot centers. Random or careless fastening is a visible quality indicator of overall installation standards.