Everywhere I drive throughout the day , none of the new homes OR the older homes with new roofs have these types of valleys. I've only seen a few. Most are woven, exactly like the manufacturer videos expressly tell us not to do, because it voids their product warranty. Am I seeing an opportunity here, to be able to share this information with homeowners who are not aware of this or maybe the home insurers themselves? I would love an opportunity to go in and correct this problem. I would welcome any advice.
You lost me at setting up a cut table being a waste of time buy some folding horses and make a siding table with a cordless saw takes what ten mins to set up? And your guys aren't bent over all day tweaking their back and wasting time getting up and down over and over slower and slower as their lower plates in their back compress more and more obviously not every situation calls for it but if your working in one area for more than a few hours I think it's worth doing
The house wrap is on wrong. Supposed to think like a drop of water. The over lapping should allow water to stay on the outside of the barrier. Shouldn’t matter with siding on it but hey
When you start the first shingle its helpful to lay the next shingle on the side to make sure that first one is straight. Sometimes our cut is not perfectly straight or many times the roof edge isn’t necessarily straight. Just a tip i hot when starting out that helped a bunch
I replace these type of windows on my house last week. i notice they put the ild windows under osb board ans nailed it. i had to cut all around the o. S b to take out the old windows. did they install them wrong?
@ohyeahthatsright3155 the homeowner was requesting it. Also, this was mostly the addition in the video, the house plywood was way worse than this section
I JUST DID MY ROOF WITH UHDZ HOPE IT WAS WORTH THE EXTRA $1000 .... NOW I HAVE A QUESTION THE ROOFERS THAT DID MINE DID THE DRIP EDGE JUST ON THE LIP GOING DOWN NOT THE SIDES OF THE ROOF ... IS THAT FINE?
@housbinpharteen7445 they should've used gutter apron on the gutter line, and drip edge on the sides if it has aluminum fascia. There are some exceptions like wood trim
Two reasons why you don’t want “nice and tight” on the drip edge: Firstly, the gutter guys that come behind you will hate that you didn’t leave them room between the fascia and the drip edge. Secondly, assuming a very straight edge, “nice and tight” isn’t as dreadful as I made it out above, but my eave-edge isn’t straight, and I’ll bet most others’ isn’t either. And if you try tight along the front, the top of the metal is going to buckle and wave. So leave about 1/2” gap and you’ll make everyone happy.