Here's a link to the last installment: Framing
My friend Sean, a certified arborist and man of several other part time pursuits, came over at just after 8 AM today. He volunteered to put the roofing on the shed a week or so ago. I happily accepted. Not only does Sean know what he's doing, but he has all the tools that make it easier to do, most importantly, a roofing nailer. So, in full disclosure, all I did today was schlep materials, hand Sean whatever he needed, and move the scaffolding from one side of the roof to the other. I think I set foot on the roof itself once all day.
The process was pretty standard, put on the drip edge, then the ice barrier up 3' past the wall, then the tar paper, then the rake edges, then the starter shingle, then the shingles, and finally the ridge vent and cap shingles. But it's all the little things of how you do each task that makes the job easy or difficult. Having put on roofs for over 20 years Sean has learned how to do things efficiently but thoroughly.
Here's Sean just beginning the shingling on the first side.
I bought a roll product sold as starter shingle. Seems like a much easier solution to me. About two and a half hours later Sean was just putting the finishing touches on the first side.
I moved the scaffolding to the other side, and moved it higher at Sean's request. I saw the logic after we started on that side. Another hour or so and he was here:
I had cut the ridge slot yesterday. The instructions said to put a 1" wide slot on just one side, but Sean felt the ridge vent wouldn't bend uniformly over the peak, so he cut another slot on the other side. The vent material was called Viper Vent. I'm familiar with Cobra Vent, but the building supply place I bought everything at didn't carry it, so this is what I got. I was surprised to read you have to apply a bead of roofing cement around the slot and set the Viper Vent into that when you nail it down, so we used a product called Geocell for that.
And a few minutes later he was done.
Working alone on the roof, Sean finished at about 3 PM.
We have some much needed rain forecast for the next several days, so I'm very happy the roof is on. Oh yeah, the color is called Riviera Red.
Tomorrow that recommended bracing goes in. Thanks for following along, and your collective help along the way.
John
My friend Sean, a certified arborist and man of several other part time pursuits, came over at just after 8 AM today. He volunteered to put the roofing on the shed a week or so ago. I happily accepted. Not only does Sean know what he's doing, but he has all the tools that make it easier to do, most importantly, a roofing nailer. So, in full disclosure, all I did today was schlep materials, hand Sean whatever he needed, and move the scaffolding from one side of the roof to the other. I think I set foot on the roof itself once all day.
The process was pretty standard, put on the drip edge, then the ice barrier up 3' past the wall, then the tar paper, then the rake edges, then the starter shingle, then the shingles, and finally the ridge vent and cap shingles. But it's all the little things of how you do each task that makes the job easy or difficult. Having put on roofs for over 20 years Sean has learned how to do things efficiently but thoroughly.
Here's Sean just beginning the shingling on the first side.
I bought a roll product sold as starter shingle. Seems like a much easier solution to me. About two and a half hours later Sean was just putting the finishing touches on the first side.
I moved the scaffolding to the other side, and moved it higher at Sean's request. I saw the logic after we started on that side. Another hour or so and he was here:
I had cut the ridge slot yesterday. The instructions said to put a 1" wide slot on just one side, but Sean felt the ridge vent wouldn't bend uniformly over the peak, so he cut another slot on the other side. The vent material was called Viper Vent. I'm familiar with Cobra Vent, but the building supply place I bought everything at didn't carry it, so this is what I got. I was surprised to read you have to apply a bead of roofing cement around the slot and set the Viper Vent into that when you nail it down, so we used a product called Geocell for that.
And a few minutes later he was done.
Working alone on the roof, Sean finished at about 3 PM.
We have some much needed rain forecast for the next several days, so I'm very happy the roof is on. Oh yeah, the color is called Riviera Red.
Tomorrow that recommended bracing goes in. Thanks for following along, and your collective help along the way.
John