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sealing and rebuilding joints that drip between storms
Leaks rarely happen at random—they favor miters, end caps, and transitions to downspouts where thermal movement is greatest. We strip failed sealant instead of globbing over it so the next storm proves the fix.
That rust streak at the corner? Almost always a joint that moved—let us rebuild it instead of masking it.
A pencil-thin drip can hollow mortar joints or stain engineered siding. Fixing the actual joint stops the cosmetic loop of repainting every spring.
We wire-brush or gently grind residue so new material bonds to metal, not to dust.
Gapped miters get shimmed square before sealant so the bead is not bridging a moving crack.
We respect temperature windows, then flow-test so you see dry metal before we pack tools.
If you already tried DIY caulk twice, invite us before fascia turns punky.
Sometimes short term, but many silicones do not bond well to painted aluminum; we match chemistry to manufacturer guidance.
Temporary wraps may help, but permanent seals need dry metal and cure time—plan around forecasts.
Often no—localized fatigue is common. We replace only sections that flex like a potato chip when pressed.
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