What is a Watertable sill?
Watertable Sills are used to trim windows in your project area. The sill provides a drip edge so any water flowing down the face of your wall drips off before the face of the stone below. Sills can also used as a transition from Siding to Stone on a partial wall.
What is a stone sill?
Cast Natural stone sills are architectural trim pieces that replicate classic rough-cut limestone. These sills are ideal for accenting under windows and where the siding meets a half wall of stone veneer.
What is Water table stone?
A water table is a projection of lower masonry on the outside of a wall slightly above the ground. A water table may also be primarily decorative, as found near the base of a wall or at a transition between materials, such as from stone to brick.
What is above the water table?
The soil surface above the water table is called the unsaturated zone, where both oxygen and water fill the spaces between sediments. The unsaturated zone is also called the zone of aeration due to the presence of oxygen in the soil.
What is the stone above a window called?
A window head is the single stone which spans the aperture above a window, and a door head spanning the aperture above the door. These are non-structural decorative features that enhance the visual appearance of a project.
What is the stone under a window called?
Sill: A flat stone used under windows, doors, and other masonry openings.
What is a water table on House?
The water table marks the boundary between that available water and the dry surface. Ground water is impacted by precipitation, irrigation and ground cover. The water table as well as local soil conditions and drainage can impact homes and their foundations.
Can stone veneer be installed over cement board?
For interior applications, stone veneer can be installed over cement board, drywall, and all of the above.
What is groundwater 6th class?
Water found below the water table is called groundwater. When rain water and water from rivers and ponds seeps through soil and fills the empty spaces and cracks deep below the ground, this is called infiltration.