The Forestry Forum is sponsored in part by:
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
I hate this roof.(I'll take some photos in the morning)It was replaced about 4 years ago. Paid job, as I knew very little about rooves at the time.I'm not convinced the person who did it did either though.Basically it leaks.Right down, just inside the glass.(It's a slate roof on a single story extension with full height windows)So, water is either getting in much higher up, possibly as the slates are all miss aligned and there's creep around their edges on the relatively shallow pitch, or its somehow wicking back at the gutter line.There is membrane under the slate so either would probably dump the water in the same place. I seem to remember the chap putting a batton across the top of the beam (oak beam between window frames and roof) with the membrane under it, and I commented at the time that wouldn't any water on the membrane just be dammed on top of the beam by the lowest batton... but was assured otherwise. And I knew no better.(I know the membrane is only really supposed to be for insects etc anyway)Anyway, I reckon what I need to do is strip the bottom course of slates and work out what's going on. I don't know if I'll be able to change anything, but it's got to be the first action, right?So, I'm thinking buy a ripper and have at it. If it's a wicking issue maybe I can fashion some lead or somthing to work. Of course the membrane was cut short of the gutter anyway...If the situation is somehow rectifiable, what's the best way to re attach the lower course? Those wire tang things? A bunch of lead is just going to look horrible.Can I glue them in with some fancy new adhesive?I guess if I take off the lower course and it's clear the water is running down the membrane from higher up, I'll just have to bodge it as best as possible till tje spring and strip the whole roof.I suspect IF the water is comming from higher, it's a combination of, possibly, the flashing not comming down low enough allowing creep behind, or that downpipe dumping too much water onto the roof, or, as mentioned, the joints between the slates being all over the place and the overlap not being sufficient for the pitch of the roof.(Again I'll take some photos tomorrow)A point to note -There was none of that, umm, angle plastic stuff fitted by the builder that is supposed to go under the lowest batton and overhang / lead into the gutter.Directly after the job there were issues and chap came back and said the issue was wicking up from the drip line and that fitting some of that stuff would solve it. But, of course, it couldn't go up under the lowest batton properly so, I think, it was just trimmed and shoved into position.This seemed to work at the time. So maybe it's somthing to do with that now?If I took the lower course of slate up and there was no evidence of water running from above, at least I could do that bit properly, maybe extend the last course out slightly and, I guess, that may solve it?But my main question at the moment is, if I take off the lower course of slates with a ripper, how do I get them back in again?It's just one of those irritating situations view. There were other irritating needless shortcuts on the same job that have just made life hard also. And now it's 2am and I've been wobbling about on a stepladder in the dark, and won't be able to sleep through thinking about it either!
Started by Modat22 on General Board
Started by chet on General Board
Started by CharlieCG36 on General Woodworking
Started by metroplexchl on Alternative methods and solutions