In truth, it's actually not that bad of an idea - if the glass shatters, it shatters on the outside, not the inside, and it basically serves the same general purpose whether on the outside or inside. But yeah, it still looks silly...
Chuck Lidell: I paint my toenails with pink and black polish. Problem is, I get more paint on my toes and on the carpet than on my nails. Any advice? Maria Sharapova: Don't you beat up other guys for a living? I don't know how to answer this.
In truth, it's actually not that bad of an idea - if the glass shatters, it shatters on the outside, not the inside, and it basically serves the same general purpose whether on the outside or inside. But yeah, it still looks silly...
Usually the point of boarding the windows is to protect the glass....
"Don't worry Boss...they can't do nothin' 'til they're through sparklin'..."
Usually the point of boarding the windows is to protect the glass....
See, I always thought it was to protect the stuff inside when the glass ultimately went...
Chuck Lidell: I paint my toenails with pink and black polish. Problem is, I get more paint on my toes and on the carpet than on my nails. Any advice? Maria Sharapova: Don't you beat up other guys for a living? I don't know how to answer this.
Well see if you put the boards on the outside...its rather hard to break the glass behind the plywood. Unless something penetrates the plywood. I think I would rather clean up one shattered window in my store that got broke when a sign blew through the plywood rather than paying for 20 some odd windows cause we had to put plywood on the inside just to protect the glass from coming inside. Arguments for both cases there are
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