Windows, Part 1
If the salesman is to sell you windows then he will first destroy any positive thoughts
you might have about your existing windows.
His main task - yes and with you in tow - is to trash the positive
thoughts you might have about your existing windows. He must prove
to you that whatever you have is worthless and a danger to your
children. He will do this. Just watch him and listen.
He will talk about how your windows are made of wood and that
wood warps and rots. And then how you have no weatherstripping
and air rushes into the home from all around the window edges.
He will tell you that one pane of glass lets heat in during the
summer and cold in during the winter. If you have aluminum or
steel casements (the frame around the glass) then he will point
out rust and corrosion and how they don’t open or close
really perfectly anymore.
He will then measure your windows. He measures them across the bottom and from
bottom to top. He can be fairly casual in his estimate of their sizes. He can over
measure. If the window is 36 inches by 36 inches (total of 72) then he writes down the
combined total of the two numbers or... Ahhhhhhh...80.
His price sheet lists all windows by such combined numbers, not
by an “X” and a “Y. Further, the windows are
priced in ranges. Everything from a combined inch number of “80”
to “100” will be the exact same price. Certainly,
a 72 combined inch number would have put you in a lower price
bracket but .. you missed it by just inches.

Thus, in this example, if you have a window that is an “80” then your window will not be
as good a deal as if it was a “100” because you aren’t getting as much window for the
same amount of money. Take a look at one of the real price sheets.
Yes, the most expensive windows in your house -- for their size -- are those little
bathroom windows with the frosted glass.
A reasonable price for a window is actually about $30 for each
square foot of glass. In the present example, the window actually
has nine square feet of glass in it and so it should cost about
9 X $30 or about $270. But this is certainly not your day.
The price of a window in this price range is... $1,613.00. Another
way to calculate the price of a window is to multiply the “Combined
Inch” number by $3.00. So in the present case the price
should be 72 X $3.00 or about $216.00. Close enough, and easy
for you to remember..
You will see several price lists on these pages. You will see
a "low" a "middle" and a "high"
price list. Just remember that these are the real prices you will
see at 11:00 at night when the salesman closes in on you.