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Building Science

Combining Sheathing With a WRB and Air Barrier

How well do Zip and ForceField sheathing integrate a structural panel with bulk water and air management?

The Zip and ForceField sheathing systems combine structural sheathing with both water and air barriers.
Image Credit: Image #1: Zip sheathing - Elden Lindamood; ForceField sheathing: Georgia-Pacific
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The Zip and ForceField sheathing systems combine structural sheathing with both water and air barriers.
Image Credit: Image #1: Zip sheathing - Elden Lindamood; ForceField sheathing: Georgia-Pacific
The first step in the Overlay Bond Durability test is to boil the sheathing panel samples for one hour.
Image Credit: Images #2 through #4: JM Huber
With each sample hot-melt glued to an aluminum loading block, they are ready to be tested to failure (pulled apart) by the Instron Mechanical Testing System (MTS). The perimeter of the contact area between the block and the panel is scored to force the failure at the facer/OSB interface rather than at the more typical fault line of the OSB core. This post-test image shows that most of the time, most of the area of fault or split is between the top outermost layer of OSB strands, not between the facer and the OSB. In other words, the failure is largely within the OSB substrate, and is not due to failure of the adhesion of the facer. The fish scale is reading about 50 pounds with no adhesion failure or give across the taped joint of the two ForceField 8" by 8" panels.
Image Credit: Images #5 through #15: Peter Yost
With the fish scale reading about 50 pounds, there is no adhesion failure and slight give in the Zip tape expressed at the panel joint. In this test, the slot represents the gap between the rough opening and the window. The PSA tape will cover the slot, with half of the tape adhering to the panel and half adhering to the window flange (either PVC or aluminum). The flange is fastened to the substrate. (In this image, the substrate is OSB; in the tests for this work the substrates were Zip and ForceField panels). To distribute the force of the 1 pound hanging weight across the tape, a 3/16-inch diameter metal rod is included under the tape along the slot. The ForceField tape has come off the ForceField panel but is still marginally adhered to the PVC flange. The ForceField tape is marginally adhered to the ForceField panel but has let go from the aluminum window flange. The Zip tape remains adhered to both the Zip panel and the aluminum flange. The Zip tape remains adhered to both the Zip panel and the PVC flange. Two 8" by 8" ForceField panels are held together by a length of ForceField tape running vertically from top to bottom. You can see beads of water on the face of the ForceField panels and tape. The same setup was used for the Zip system. One ForceField panel is clamped to the trailer frame while the other panel is held vertically and pulled straight up. The fish scale is reading about 5 pounds, the force required to pull the ForceField tape off the clamped horizontal ForceField panel. For the equivalent Zip system setup, the fish scale read 20 pounds (the force required to make the Zip tape release from the clamped horizontal panel). The photo shows the two horizontal panels used in the wetting and perpendicular pull test. Note that the ForceField facer has become “rougher” as the result of the wetting and the bottom of the ForceField panel shows some delamination of the facer from the panel. To the right, the Zip panel shows no surface change as the result of wetting or the pull test.

Full Disclosure: First, there are a lot of different ways to get continuous air and water control layers on the exterior of a building enclosure. You can use housewrap, taped-and-sealed rigid foam insulation, liquid-applied membrane, or either the Huber Zip or Georgia-Pacific ForceField system. Each approach has strengths and weaknesses.

All things considered, I prefer the performance delivered by Zip System sheathing and tape. But when I learned about ForceField, I decided to dig into how these two systems compare.

Second, I have done quite a bit of work with Huber Engineered Woods, the manufacturer of Zip sheathing, because of the company’s support for the Wingnut Test Facility and a new Hanley-Wood educational series on high-performance building (Home Building Crossroads). Their support to my work is technical, not financial. I did receive test sample materials from both Georgia-Pacific and Huber for this blog.

What do you call these two systems?

It can be difficult to even just name these product systems. Huber states that “Zip System sheathing and tape is an innovative structural roof and wall system with an integrated water and air barrier.”

Georgia-Pacific states, “The ForceField air and water barrier system from Georgia-Pacific consists of structural engineered wood sheathing panels laminated with a proprietary air and water barrier.”

So, these systems combine structural sheathing with a water-resistive barrier (WRB) and an air barrier.

Third-party assessments

The primary third-party reference for the technical properties and performance of the Zip system is ICC-ES Report ESR-1474 (re-issued 10/2016).

For ForceField, the primary third-party reference is APA Product Report PR-N136 (revised December 14, 2016).

How are the two systems similar?

The common elements of Zip and ForceField are:

  • (1) 7/16-inch OSB panels, rated as Exposure 1, Department of Commerce Product Standard 2 (DOC PS 2), Structural 1-rated. Note that all Zip panel thicknesses are available Structural 1-rated; ForceField offers Structural 1 as an option for ForceField.
  • (2) Each has a proprietary, vapor-permeable, factory-applied “overlay” applied to the exterior face of the OSB.
  • (3) Each system includes a proprietary, pressure-sensitive acrylic (PSA) or modified-acrylic tape. (Neither tape has release paper.)
  • (4) Easy system includes supplemental flashing for rough openings and sheathing margins (a proprietary GP flashing tape for ForceField and proprietary stretch flashing tape and liquid sealant for use with Zip System panels).

How are the two systems different?

  • (1) Lamination of WRB facer – Zip’s proprietary overlay is an integral part of the OSB manufacturing process; that means that the overlay (or membrane) is fused during the compression formation of the bed of strands and resins into OSB panels. The ForceField System proprietary overlay is glue-laminated to the OSB panels after the fact.
  • (2) The OSB face used for the WRB differs – Zip System panels uses the “rough” side of their OSB for the WRB overlay; ForceField System uses the “smooth” side of their OSB for the WRB overlay.
  • (3) Roof sheathing – All Zip System panels are approved as a structural sheathing panel and underlayment for roofs; ForceField System panels are not.
  • (4) Compliance with key ICC Acceptance Criteria (AC) – Zip System panels full comply with AC310 — Acceptance Criteria for Water-Resistive Membranes Factory-Bonded to Wood-Based Structural Sheathing, Used as Water-Resistive Barriers. Zip tape fully complies with AC148 — Acceptance Criteria for Flexible Flashing Materials. On the other hand, ForceField System panels and tape are not documented as compliant with these key standards. (Note: In images #2 through #4, below, samples of Zip System panel are subjected to an “Overlay Bond Durability Test,” a test modified from AC310. It’s frankly remarkable that after boiling and drying and subjected to pull-apart stress, the failure is not at the bond between the WRB overlay and the OSB; it fails largely by separating strands from the surface of the OSB. It’s not possible to conduct this test on ForceField System sheathing; the WRB facer or overlay delaminates completely from the OSB during the boiling phase of the test.)

The tapes also differ:

  • (1) Zip System tape is much thicker than ForceField tape (Zip – 0.012 inch; ForceField – 0.003 inch) and has a polyolefin backer. The ForceField tape backer is described as a polymeric film.
  • (2) Zip System tape comes 90 feet to a roll; ForceField System tape comes 180 feet in a roll. ForceField System tape can be hand-torn to length; Zip System tape must be cut to length.
  • (3) When installed, Zip System tape must be rolled as stipulated in the manufacturer’s directions and not loaded for a minimum of one hour, while the ForceField System tape can be applied with just hand pressure and achieves its full adhesion nearly immediately.
  • (4) ForceField system tape is approved by the manufacturer for installation down to 0°F; Zip System tape is currently manufacturer-approved down to 20°F.

Finally, the warranties differ:

  • (1) The ForceField warranty is described as “Lifetime Limited” to the original owner, and is non-transferable. The Zip system warranty is described as “30-year System Limited” to the original owner.
  • (2) The Zip System warranty covers all system components: OSB panels, Zip overlay, Zip tape, and Zip liquid flash; ForceField limits their warranty to just their OSB panels.
  • (3) Coverage – ForceField’s warranty states, “In the event of Product Delamination… GP will… either repair or replace the nonconforming portion of the Product, or reimburse you twice the original retail purchase price.” The Zip System warranty states, “…the system …will satisfy the Air and Water Resistance Properties Test…” and “[the warranty] is limited to the repair or replacement, at HEW’s option, of materials giving rise to the failure to comply with this warranty.”

Wingnut testing of the two systems

Many of you may know about my frustration with laboratory standardized testing under conditions that are fundamentally different from what happens on job sites. (Please see Two Wingnuts Describe Their Backyard Tape Tests or the BuildingGreen blog content, Sticky Business, for more information on the work of the Wingnut Test Facility).

The following information is strictly anecdotal, and represents my own attempt to stress each system, with an admittedly woeful sample size of one sample per test.

Straight-Pull Test (see Images #5 and #6, below).

I followed the manufacturer’s installation instructions for each system and used a “fish scale” to measure how much force the system withstood. You can see that both systems have very strong bonds between the facer and the PSA tape, withstanding up to 50 pounds of force in this test. Note that the Zip System tape stretches with the force while the ForceField System tape has little to no give.

Perpendicular-Load Test Split Substrates Including Window Flange (see Images #7 through #12, below).

This test was developed to better represent the forces that tapes and substrates could experience at a window installation, where one-half of the tape adheres to the wall sheathing and one-half adheres to the window flange. (We used both PVC and aluminum flanges.) A 3/8-inch slot in the panel represents the gap between the round opening and the window unit.

For all the details of this test, see the “Wingnut Test Facility – WTF Field- and Benchtop-Testing of Building Materials & Systems, BuildingGreen, Inc. September 16, 2015.”

When I set up this test in my garage recently, I followed the protocol and had the tests underway at around noon on Thursday (June 15, 2017), doing the initial wetting with a spray bottle. I applied 10 squirts (about 6 milliliters) to the front and back of each panel. (When spraying the back side where water could “pool,” I inverted the panel to “drain” any standing water out of the slot).

When I returned to the garage at 5:30 p.m., both ForceField setups had failed, while both Zip System sheathing and tape setups were still holding. As you can see from the photos, on the setup with aluminum flange, the tape let go at the flange, while on the setup with the PVC flange, the tape let go of the ForceField panel.

In the past, when testing multiple tapes, this test has gone on for weeks and then months, with some systems failing in the first day. In particular, the Zip System sheathing and tape setups persisted for more than a year of outdoor temperature and relative humidity swings and repeated wetting on both surfaces. And while other PSA tapes worked better on either the PVC flange or the aluminum flange, Zip System tape held just fine with both PVC and aluminum window flanges.

Wetting, then perpendicular pull, test (Images #13 through #15).

In this test, I drilled a round hole in one square, taped that square to another square, and then wetted the hanging results about 10 times, spraying water over the top edge of the top square, on the face of both squares and tape, and around the round hole. I did this to simulate the exposure to rain that could happen if the panels were up on a building but not yet taped or sealed around penetrations.

When I did the perpendicular pull test, the average force to separate the tape from the panel was 5 pounds for the ForceField System sheathing and tape and 20 pounds for the Zip System sheathing and tape. You can see in the last photo that the surface of the ForceField has become “rougher” with the repeated wetting, and some of the ForceField System facer has pulled off, while the Zip System square shows no signs of any facer delamination.

I did not observe any deterioration. Nor did I test around the holes I drilled. (Essentially, I ran out of time on this test.)

Summing up

Any system relying on PSA tape for both watertightness and airtightness is breaking the first law of building science: physics trumps chemistry. Having said that, it is almost impossible to achieve high-performance levels of airtightness without sticky chemistry. So if you are going to break that first law by having the leading top edge of the tape not protected by a lap, you had better have a lot of faith in the bond between the tape and all its substrates.

The second law of building science is to shelter or protect your air and water management systems. But how do you shelter them without burying them where they are difficult or impossible to inspect, repair, or replace?

I include this context to emphasize just how important are the bonds between substrates and tapes, both for the Zip System and the ForceField System. They have to maintain their bonds for the life of the assembly, because inspection and repair or replacement means taking the assembly apart.

The bonds between the Zip System facer and OSB, between the Zip System tape and the Zip facer, and the the bond between the Zip tape and key assembly materials such as PVC and aluminum window flanges, are all more robust than those of the ForceField system. This is supported by both standardized test results and Wingnut Test Facility benchtop testing.

Some might argue that these bonds represent overkill in the Zip System; perhaps the ForceField System bonds are perfectly sound and represent an improvement over other approaches to air and water barrier systems. For my money, thought, the consequences of being wrong on this are too critical to go with a reduced safety margin.

A final note: For the best bond, PSA tape should be applied on dry, clean substrates under mild temperature conditions. But perhaps the most important condition is pressure. It’s pressure that activates or “wets” the adhesive and allows it to flow so that it achieves maximum surface area contact with the substrate. You can’t press a tape too much, but you can press it too little!

In addition to acting as GBA’s technical director, Peter Yost is the Vice President for Technical Services at BuildingGreen in Brattleboro, Vermont. He has been building, researching, teaching, writing, and consulting on high-performance homes for more than twenty years. An experienced trainer and consultant, he’s been recognized as NAHB Educator of the Year. Do you have a building science puzzle? Contact Pete here. You can also sign up for BuildingGreen’s email newsletter to get a free report on avoiding toxic insulation, as well as regular posts from Peter.

Wingnut Test Facility.pdf

18 Comments

  1. Expert Member
    ARMANDO COBO | | #1

    Jobsite reality
    The biggest problems I see with WRB OSB panels is not the product but the installation. Jobsite installs are a whole different animal than on a lab or controlled test facility. When I visit jobsites, I see Zip panels with mud all over them because they were laid on the ground for weeks, overdriven nails, tape applied after weeks of panels installed on the wall and dusty, tape installed with kinks and not rolled. It is not Huber’s fault for failures I see, but it is a systemic problem with labor training and oversight, especially when folks rely on the WRP OSB panel as the only WRB and air barrier.
    Doing the math in CZ3, I like to use regular taped Plwd/OSB and taped R3 outsulation, with staggered seams, for the same price of the WRB OSB system panels, even though there may be same issues with quality installation, but I gain the thermal bridging mitigation, and if additional budget allows, cover it all with a wrap.

  2. JC72 | | #2

    @Armando. +1 An apartment complex built near me used ZIP
    and the panels weren't taped for over 2 months and the WRB wasn't covered with cladding for over 6 months.

    I think 6 month's is the max allowed by Huber warranty.

  3. jackofalltrades777 | | #3

    Armando Cobo
    I agree with Armando. Workers will butcher any fine details. The days of skilled and proud workmanship is dwindling and dwindling fast. Recently GBA had an article about how skilled laborers are becoming more rare.

    When it comes to tapes and detail work, workers don't have the patience to sit there and apply it properly. Time is money so it's slam and go. Usually details like this need to be done by the homeowner or someone with a specialty needs to be brought on the job-site to install and review. Leaving it to the framers will result in sloppy and failed systems.

    Visit a jobsite today and you will see what myself and Armando are talking about...

  4. GBA Editor
    Martin Holladay | | #4

    Installation quality of Zip tape
    Armando and Peter L are correct. Below is a photo of Zip tape installed at a construction site at the Serenbe development near Atlanta, Georgia -- a well-known "green" development that brags about its dedication to energy efficiency. I took the photo a few years ago.

    .

  5. Peter Yost | | #5

    Job site reality and quality
    I get to see my fair share of job sites and the lack of quality workmanship that is all too common. But I don't think that this particular high performance system for continuous exterior air barrier/WRB is any more or less prone to this issue. In fact, I would argue that the stark contrast of the green ZIP panels and black PSA tape make visual inspection easy and a blower door test prior to cladding and interior insulation makes it easier to verify quality installation.

    We can all show innumerable job site images of poor detailing, made even more painful because the system was designed and specced for high performance, only to have it fail during construction. This is an industry issue, not defined by or limited to these two systems.

  6. user-417066 | | #6

    A little cranky today
    I think "We should pack it in, give up, and stop trying to build good houses, or maybe just stop building!!" We can't seem to find the right talent - so let's give up. Wait!, Wait, maybe let's re-think this for the moment. I have a library of photos that would make Martin's look like a superior installation. I also have photos of installations that builders have done the second time, and they look dam good - near perfect. So what's the difference - EDUCATION!! I also have photos of a house that hit .16 Ach 50, one at .20 Ach 50, and one at .35 ACH 50 using Zip as the primary air barrier. Hmmmmm maybe with a little education, success lies within. As an industry we can continue to tell ourselves "that's the best we can do" or maybe we roll up our sleeves and take responsibility to strive doe a job well done. I have the good fortune to work with some exceptional builders. They weren't born with that talent, it was acquired thru hard work - imagine that, actually doing something with a conscience. As an industry we have to stop lying to ourselves and let the bad apples rot away, and they will. We need to promote success and strive for solutions to solve for it rather that list the same old crappy excuses as to why this can't be done. I'm not limiting my rant to just the exterior sheathing either, it's all trades, and also included in this group is designers and Architects. We all need the education, we all need to properly execute, and we all need to work towards solutions, not excuses. I've included a graphic I recently created - let's start living it, please.

  7. user-417066 | | #7

    Well Done
    In context of the info provided, good job Peter!! I found it helpful, and it helped me solidify some personal conclusions.

  8. GBA Editor
    Martin Holladay | | #8

    Response to Steve Baczek
    Steve,
    Thanks for your comments.

    GBA supports you 100% -- we also believe in education. It's what we do.

    The group that I don't have a good answer for is the group of educated homeowners who are embarking on a custom home project in a part of the country where skills are low. It's hard to know what these homeowners are supposed to do, short of quitting their day job and hanging out at the job site all day.

  9. user-417066 | | #9

    One of our problems (Martin)
    Martin - Agreed. But most places in the country have good builders and bad builders. I have worked in some very low populated areas and still found some very talented open minded contractors that did a beautiful job. One of the problems is that for every good contractor there are 5 who will undercut them to get the job based on price. The uneducated homeowner sees the contractor comparison as apples to apples when it is clearly not. It's the 5 undercutting contractors that then need to work faster and with lesser than successful materials (or installations). It's these 5 that make the good ones look bad. It is certainly a battle everyday. I'm often asked "what material should I use?" my answer is always the same " the one installed properly". I find improper installation far more a villain than a material. As for the homeowners - well many of the ones I work with I turn onto GBA so they can get some education as to the choices they should be making, and as a team (client, me, and builder) we can make intelligent, informed decisions that we all understand.

  10. JustinTG | | #10

    "Any system relying on PSA tape for both watertightness and airtightness is breaking the first law of building science: physics trumps chemistry. Having said that, it is almost impossible to achieve high-performance levels of airtightness without sticky chemistry. So if you are going to break that first law by having the leading top edge of the tape not protected by a lap, you had better have a lot of faith in the bond between the tape and all its substrates."

    This is been my concern for some time with ZIP/FF. If tape is not lapped/shingled eventually water can work its way in. Doing work on the Oregon Coast/Portland, you see this all the time. I've actually seen tape create a bowl/pool and start funneling water in the house.

    What if a person taped the vertical seams and used the liquid flashing on the horizontal seams? Seems like a good compromise of speed, efficiency, and durability.

    Justin

    1. Jon_R | | #11

      Or how about some type of Z flashing in the horizontal seams with tape over it for air-tightness?

      1. JustinTG | | #12

        That would likely work fine IMO. Definitely a better back up than without, would that be more/less work than liquid flashing horizontal seams? Also cost difference? Somebody, beside me 😊, should run that calculation.
        I wonder if you started funneling water in behind the tape would it create a pool/trap and back up water up/over the z flashing? ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

        1. Jon_R | | #13

          If the bond fails, I expect that liquid flashing would have the same issue as tape. But maybe liquid is more fool proof to apply - but I haven't seen a good test that includes a 1/8" sheathing gap being compressed down to 1/16" and then to 1/4".

          Might be cheaper to just put WRB over taped Zip. Or use plain OSB with a fully adhered film WRB.

          The interior side of the Z flashing should extend upwards further than the tape does (preventing overflow).

          1. JustinTG | | #15

            "If the bond fails, I expect that liquid flashing would have the same issue as tape"
            That's a good point. I think the tapes leave more of an edge though. In my experience the fluid flashings seen to bond better as well.

            "Might be cheaper to just put WRB over taped Zip. Or use plain OSB with a fully adhered film WRB."
            I agree, although I prefer plywood over OSB.

            "The interior side of the Z flashing should extend upwards further than the tape does (preventing overflow)."
            True, hopefully the installers caulk the z metal seams where they lap or else that could be a problem. Also would the bottoms of the panel rot out if they are just sitting in water?

            At the end of the day I'm not really dogmatic about any of this, in most areas any of this would completely fine. On the Oregon coast you do have think worst case.

            I actually saw somebody wrapping a house with Grace Vycor (9")when I worked down there. I don't know what the perm rating is on that, but probably not much. Not a good idea IMO. I'd like to try the blueskin at some point.

    2. Expert Member
      MALCOLM TAYLOR | | #14

      Justin,

      I've seen failed tape creating a reservoir too, but only on house-wrap, where typically the tape used isn't as tenacious as the types used on sheathing. Are there any reports of Zip-tape causing the same problem? Either way I'm much more comfortable relying on laps. As Jon said: A layer of house-wrap doesn't do any harm, or represent much more in labour and materials.

      1. JustinTG | | #16

        "I've seen failed tape creating a reservoir too, but only on house-wrap"
        This tape (I don't want to mention the brand) was a window flashing tape that is used on plywood. Not ZIP tape though.

        "Are there any reports of Zip-tape causing the same problem?"
        Not that I know of, I've just seen what a beating houses on the Oregon coast take. Water proof measures that aren't lapped/shingled would concern me as a long term problem.

        "Either way I'm much more comfortable relying on laps. As Jon said: A layer of house-wrap doesn't do any harm, or represent much more in labour and materials."
        I couldn't agree more.

        1. Expert Member
          MALCOLM TAYLOR | | #17

          It is hard to remember when you are building during nice weather in the PNW, that at times (like now!) the building exterior will be as completely saturated with water as we are when we shower.

  11. alexdorf | | #18

    First and foremost, unless the overdriven fastener completely penetrates the panel, it doesn't need to be taped over - it won't hinder the WRP sheathing's ability to resist moisture. HOWEVER, it will affect the shear/structural value - this applies to all the panels, regardless of whether they're a combination or not. So sure, belts and suspenders, go ahead and tape or liquid flash those little guys if it helps you sleep at night.

    More importantly - what does the entire assembly look like - I'd venture to say that if you're depending on the WRB as the main line of defense (as we have in the past), well, then you're looking for trouble. An example - butting your cladding right up to that WRB.

    Yet, if you add exterior insulation, followed by a proper rainscreen, then go to the cladding, well, you've got a lot less to worry about when it comes to a few over-fastened penetrations on your WRB (again, unless there are so many that your structural integrity is now in question, which has nothing to do with WRB).

    I think the reason why high performance builders are keen to work with a Zip style system, is that they understand how it fits into a high performance assembly.

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