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I got an estimate from Leaf Filter for $7,900 for 200ft. He started dwindling the price down and was at $3,300 at the end. So that tells you what their profit margins are.
I own my own small contractor company and do many different jobs, including installing gutter guards. I found the best price for the homeowner and for me to make a little bit of money, (since they are pretty easy to put on I don’t kill them on the labor as much as a much more intensive project) I charge 110$ per box of gutter guard, they are about 90$ at Home Depot, and 3$ per piece to put on. I just did a house last week that cost the home owner $440 for the 4 boxes and I charge 4$ per piece to put on. So I’m profiting about $160 per box. The average home in my area has about 160ft of gutters. The cost will go up slightly on homes that are 2-3 stories as it takes me more time to do the job. The prices I quoted are on a ranch style home. With material included it costs this home owner around $1100. Not a bad price and I made that money in about 3.5 hours. So to your point…. They jack the price WAY up and their profit margins are outrageously higher than a 3 man company can do it for that doesn’t try to rip anyone off.
@@danmorse2002 at 1100 for 160 ft thatshould legally be minimum wage Don't pay the least and expect the most.your 3 man team verse one of my best guys. Get a job and invest wiser
Did you have to screw them in or just snap them in i was wondering i just need a few on one end where the neighbor trees pours all the leaves in the gutter about 9 feet or so
Thank you for creating this video . I’m a contractor and I appreciate it. The only issue I have with the video is that is a new shingled roof system that hasn’t adhered to the structure yet. Most roofs are not able to lift up the edges like you do in your video making installation much different.
Don't waste your money or time with the Huxley plastic gutter snap-in screens... They do not work ... After a few hours if you manage to get one or two installed, the plastic will crack and fall apart from the sun rays in just a few years ... (Oakland Home Inspections LLC) Metal gutter guards are the only ones that work and actually fit, and do not crack or fall apart ...
I've been saying this for years. I used to work in the aluminum industry and installing gutters was one of many products I installed. I have seen all the issues with these gutter guards. It usually just makes more problems. Just buy a gutter nozzle attachment for your hose and give your gutters a periodic spray down. You can even get one with an extension and clean your gutters from the ground.
Seems like even with gutter guards, you're still doing work, may as well just clear them out every year. In our case, it's definitely not as easy. We live on a hill, so our house is such that the only way to do that is to get on the roof. It's technically 4 stories tall from the back (3 levels with main floor access from the front, but lower level still elevated by about 1 level from the rear). There's no way a gutter nozzle attachment is gonna work for us in the back of the house, so... to the roof it is!
Someone's speaking common sense! I am surrounded by trees and I clean mine twice a year (in spring and fall). It takes me less than an hour to do my house, car port and workshop. If you are using gutter guards in a cold climate you are setting yourself up for ice damming and potentially thousands of dollars of damage to your roof. Even if you do find guards that work for you, you will spend thousands of dollars on something that could have been accomplished with simple maintenance.
Wow. I've seen a lot of how to videos and reviews, but this is one of the best ones. Great job comparing everything without selling anything and not throwing companies under the bus. Great video.
Some products and companies need to be under the bus. If you don’t tell the brand why do the video. It’s amazing people can’t call crap ,,, what it is,,, crap.
Don't waste your money or time with the Huxley plastic gutter snap-in screens... They do not work ... After a few hours if you manage to get one or two installed, the plastic will crack and fall apart from the sun rays in just a few years ... (Oakland Home Inspections LLC) Metal gutter guards are the only ones that work and actually fit, and do not crack or fall apart ...
I bought one of the cheap white plastic guards he was talking about at 14:45. I tried it out on my garage. There are two giant maple trees that throw out tons of debris and leaves on the garage. Let me tell you...they work awesome! I'm totally blown away. They have been on there for 8 years and I've yet to have to clean my gutter once. I look into them every year and they are clear, no issues. I live in Minnesota and these gutters see every weather scenario you can throw at them: heavy thunderstorms, hail, snow, ice, leaves, seeding trees in the spring, leaves in the fall. The only thing they haven't seen in 8 years is a tornado or straight line winds. They are still in good shape. The ones I have do look cheap and kinda flimsy but I've gotta say, if they failed tomorrow I'd go out and buy the same thing again because I think I paid $5 bucks for a 3 foot section. I did my whole garage for less than $40 bucks. Maybe I got lucky and there are similar products that do suck? Not sure.
Same with me. I bought them on sale (Menards) and they were less than you paid. And I am in MN also. I had them for 5 years and just sold the house and inspector passed them. I need some on my new house and will go with the same cheapos on sale at Menards. But I need gutters on my walkout wide which is 2 floors up. For these I will get some LeafGuard or similar as I don't do tall ladders anymore (nor roofs).
I used those kind as well here in CT. We have lots of maple trees around. They were installed about 20 years ago, and only were taken down because we put a new roof on. We get a LOT of leaves and maple helicopters around. Every couple of years, I need to clean out the helicopter bits.
So glad to hear this. I just bought these plastic ones at Menards, but they had the hole grid and mesh. I'm not cheap but for what most people charge to install leaf guards, this cost me a couple hundred bucks and that was including paying a local handyman to install them on the second story that I couldn't get to. Easy install, snaps right in, no screws.... Seemed like a no brainer to me.
I was sold on the foam insert gutter filter by Future Foam from Menards. After 1 year it has proven to be a massive failure. It is as if there is no gutter installed. The rain flows right over the gutter because the filter is plugged with small debri and creates a plugged effect. Water comes in the basement again. Total waste of money. I have given up on the idea of any guard or filter. Back to the days of cleaning the gutters twice a year!
My father was looking for a solution after making his own and wanting better, this video was exactly what he needed. Thank you!!! By far the most efficient and honest video we watched.
I've had the white "garbage" plastic gutter covers with the mesh from Menards installed for 2.5 years now. They have done the job perfectly well, have not been damaged at all. I live in Minnesota with the harshest winters, hot summers, heavy storms, etc... they work just fine.
On my house 33 years ago the gutter installers used a 1/4" screen material as a leaf guard. Still in use. I still have to clean the gutters time to time but after watching this I'm probably going to keep what I have. I was considering spending money on plastic or metal covers. This video was very helpful. Seems no system is perfect. I probably have 75 feet of gutters. You saved me a lot of money. Thanks
Update - the first gutter guard recommended is made very good, but it also has a serious issue in one of my customers who has this installed. The screen has actually started to become one big muddy mat. In other words, the screen is so fine that little grains of mud or asphalt are starting to fill in the screens and water is now running over those areas. For 2 years now I have gone out to her home and manually brushed the screens where the muddy matting is occurring.
I find it funny that he gets to the last plastic ones and say are a waste of money, and they won't last. I have those cheap plastic one on my house. They've been there for 20 years, and they do a great job on a house that is surrounded by Oak trees.
Excellent. I almost purchased the foam gutter guards for ease of install. I wasn't thinking about dirt roof debris clogging them. Thanks for the video.
Great video sir, NO, “BS” just straight facts. Many of those you have shown, I have seen at the stores, your thoughts mirror mine. One thing I will add, that big sponge one “STINKS BAD”.
He bashes the foam inserts, but I see a problem: At about the 8:15 mark, it appears he is starting an install of the foam and it is backward! The wide edge goes against the REAR of the gutter and the thin "knife-edge" goes into the groove in the FRONT of the gutter. If I am correct, then he cannot assess the efficacy of these foam inserts fairly ... right? I installed about 20 feet of these just a few days ago, so I cannot comment yet, but a neighbor who has had them in his same-configuration gutters for five years and says they work quite well ... when install correctly.
Good review. I would be interested in knowing the impact of these gutter covers when there is snow and when it freezes . and how that might actually cause damning that might push ice back up under your shingles. My personal opinion is that in the winter months in areas of snow and ice it is important to get sun shining into the gutters to help melt the snow and ice. I recently installed new open gutters on my home, but I opted for the 5 inch larger gutters and downspouts and that sure has helped with keeping out debris.
For my one story house I duct tape an eight foot pvc section and elbow on my leaf blower, works great. My neighbor paid LeafFilter six thousand dollars to install on his one story house. I told him he was nuts.
Great review. I think that micro-mesh is the only way to go. It completely closed off your gutters, so there is zero chance of anything getting in (except rain). I installed Gutter Guard a few years ago in the back, and just installed them in the front. It was quick and easy, and it looks great. Total cost was around $300.00. A friend paid over $10,000.00 for LeafGuard. What a rip-off. And LeafGuard does clog up.
@@peterc504 gutter guard is from costco. I installed them at my father's house and they work great and are easy to clean if too much debris stays on them which happens rarely and only in certain spots
@@gheerock4077Costco guards are called Easy On and are a fine mesh design. Biggest criticism I have seen is that they allow too much water to runover gutters in heavy rain, but they do not clog.
You guys just saved me, my time, my money from buying the foam and plastic gutter guards. I was ready to buy from Amazon. Good thing I decided to look for reviews. Huge thank you!
I have the plastic ones with the screens. They work well in the fall with the heavy leaves, but the whirly birds from the maple trees always got thru in he spring. Now the screens are falling off. I'm thinking about peeling off the screens and leaving the plastic piece. I'll also go back to using the strainers over the downspouts for the small stuff in the spring. It seems like no matter what you choose, it will create another problem down the road. If you can find a decent outfit that cleans gutters, that would probably be best. Don't sign a contract for them to come regularly. You want to call them when the last leaves have fallen in the fall and other trees are done dropping in the spring.
I only have a one story house, but I've never seen any gutter guard that has convinced me that it is less trouble than just cleaning the gutters once in a while.
Living in Ontario Canada we experience all nature throws at our treed property into our gutters. Each late fall I climb a ladder to the high side of the slope with garden hose in hand and rinse the gutters out. For safety I have my wife down at the bottom of the ladder to give me something soft to land on should I slip. Gutter guards,save your money.
@@happyrecluse2849 Here's a pro tip. Have your wife wear a bright green safety vest so you can always see where your landing spot is out of the corner of your eye. 😆
Oh my I’m glad we have them with lots of trees but the right kind must be used or they clog up. He’s right. They do help a lot so get the best one. Raptor rail with aluminum rails and a special stainless steel mesh. I’ve learned from others that this is very good. And you use screws to attach on both running rails and it helps strengthen. There is another kind….Leaf filter. Good reviews too.
I built an extension for my wet/dry portable shop vac out of central-vac pipe. I used 90° & 45° sweep fittings at the top to get the right angle for the last short piece of pipe that I cut to fit flat in the gutter. Works great! NO leaf guard, NO ladder!
Properly sized gutters and leader pipes with proper pitch will wash out most of the roofing granules in the gutters. Don't sweat the small stuff, if you can keep the large debris out yet allow good water flow into the gutter you can go many years without even looking up there to check them. I personally use 22 gage sheets of perforated stainless steel, it has 1/8" holes on 3/16" centers. Basically nothing gets through except shingle granules, even pine needles stay out because they would have to land vertically and hit the hole perfectly to make it in. I have a 6 inch gutter so i cut 8 inch pieces 10 foot long and put a 2 inch kick (bend) on them to match the pitch of the roof, then slide the 2 inch kick under the shingles, and use 3/4" stainless tek screws to fasten the perf to the top side flange of the gutter. I like using tek screws because they can be taken in and out several times and reused if the guards need to be removed for any reason. Had them up there for 4 years so far and they are clean as a whistle. Cost for material broke down to $3.30 per linear foot. Of course you have to shear and bend the pieces and install yourself. Fortunately i am a sheetmetal worker and was able to get this task done fairly easily. This setup will last a lifetime.
I’ve been called out to clean the leaf guard gutter, at every house the warranty had been voided out because the owner didn’t keep the gutters clean. However I did find a way to clean them out with all the leaves inside. The owners were very upset , especially with what they had paid. You can’t keep the grit out of the gutters so get the one that stops the limbs, leaves and nuts 🥜, and every 3 to 4 years the grits can be washed out because of the larger holes
I just have a strip of 1/4" hardware cloth covering mine and have had no issues even in torrential rains. I don't know what this guy's talking about regarding the "granules"... I'm 22 years into a 20 year roof and yeah, there's granules, but nowhere near enough to even pretend it's a problem.
I have actually had great success with the cheap plastic ones with the round holes and mircoscreen. I have had them on my house for 12 years. I removed them this year to paint the gutters and fascia. The only gutter that had any build up was a 40 footer with only one downspout and not enough pitch,
Loved your comparisons. I think you are spot on with assessments for residential roofs. However, I have an almost flat commercial building metal roof in which I had guards like your second best you recommend with small holes. I have found these horrible for my roof because they can’t pass enough water through the small holes when there is a half decent rain (large roof area collects lots of water). The water then pools on top of the guard (particularly with some leaves on top also), and it flows over the gutter edge and into my building creating a leak that actually pools water! I have no doubt my building is poorly designed (and it’s old too), but in my case the small hole guards (flat AL with too few and too small hole) are causing leaks instead of helping to prevent them. I had the spout guards before but they would clog with leaves and then gutters overflow, again with leaks. I’m going to remove the small hole guards and replace them with a large hole mesh type. Since I have a metal roof, I’m not concerned about aggregate collecting, and I can spray out debris every couple years: I just need to keep leaves from clogging the spouts. Bottom line is one size doesn’t fit all. Thanks for the comparison!
I got a quote from leaf gutter for nine thousand dollars. The salesman said they only do the best work. That is just way to expensive for the job when another contractor gave a quote for two thousand. Big difference for sure.
@@RoofingInsights3.0 I can do the work for way less. The manufactures use the do not sell to customers to force them to pay big money using cuntractors. Just can not see paying the thousands for something that I can do in two to three day after work. Thanks.
I was looking for a solution as a diy and stumbled upon this. I will just keep using my pressure washer with an angled head and extension. Works every season and clear out the gutters. Only thing I've done was put screens on the downspouts. Thank you for the video, it was very helpful
Great video! After 30 years of installing every (leafproof) or (Gutter cover) known to mankind, and after watching customers pay 2 dollars a foot all the way up into the Thousands with a finance plan. There is( no) great gutter guards or covers(in my opinion,after 20 years as an installer/owner and retired home inspector) No such thing as maintenance free either(that is all in the fine print)You are spot on with you great video also! Thanks for informing the people. There are so many things that can cause gutter failures. Pitch, length,Trees,landscaping.(i just replaced what i was told was ice damaged gutters, long story short the new landscape tubes were full/crushed under ground causing the gutters not to drain therefore gutters simply got heavy from the weight of the frozen water) There are cheaper (affordable for most working families) I recommend metal brands that are at the least attached by screws to the gutter, so they do not blow off and yet consider the slotted guards,maybe with the homeowner being fully aware that they will still need maintained or cleaned/checked yearly.(just my opinion) Thanks again for your videos!
For nine years running now, I've had the more coarse gutter foam in a 24 foot section of gutter that is right under a very messy Douglas Fir tree that drops tons of pine needles and pine cones onto my garage roof and driveway. This foam has done a wonderful job at keeping water flowing off of the roof and through the gutters. Once or twice a year, I use a garden hose to wash the stuck needles off of the foam. Against pine needles, there is nothing that works as well as gutter foam. And it's easy to install (and remove if necessary, though I've never had to remove mine.)
Great video! Very educational! Thank you! New roof installed in 2011 with gutters and gutter guards. I cleaned mine a few days ago (I normally pay someone else to do it, but they are no longer available) and pretty sure I have style #3. Yes, the stuff builds up and sits on the guard and that lip on the front was a real pain to clean. It required a lot of extra effort to dig out all the gunk stuck in there. My contractor was singing the praises of this guard when he quoted the job and claimed it was the best and only one he would recommend. Perhaps it WAS the best in 2011, I'm not sure. I shared this video. Everyone should watch it!
You have to be aware that if the contractor is bidding on a job, they will recommend the cheapist ones they can install the fastest to increase their bottom line.
I used the rounded vinyl gutter cover very successfuly for 8 years before it needed attention. I like it personally. At 1 dollar a foot can't beat it. Not junk as you say.
No matter which option you choose a good summary is: that you still have to clean and maintain your gutters but most of these products will reduce how often you have to.
@@ernievilla6840 *Actually, that might be true. Not as often, but **_removing_** the screens / covers to allow the "less often" cleaning negates the advantage. Cleaning becomes a hellofa job.*
I have to disagree. I put the plastic ones on my new 2,600 square foot house in 2006 and they have not failed and work really well. I have three locations on the house where I still have to put a ladder up to clean buildup off the top of the guard and that is due to house design and no the design of the guard. The three locations all have crickets where three different roof lines drain and there is a deflector on the gutter to prevent overflow in these locations. The deflector catches and traps leaves and what I call oak pods that drop from numerous trees in the spring time. For the little time I have to put up ladder to clean these areas twice a year, I would install the same product all over again. I see no failure or sagging of these guards.
For the plastic one that's supposed to fail and the worst one that has the water turning over and going down the slots and leaves sliding off, It's amazing I have had them installed for over 5 years and they never failed ONCE! No leaves inside and virtually all rain INSIDE the gutter instead of running over in torrential downpours and no pine needles either. They may not work for him but they sure work HERE!
Glad I found you. I was going to install a leaf guard system on my new gutters to keep the pine needles out as they slide off the metal roof. Saw the black metal ones and the plastic ones at Lowe's. Decided to wait. Sure glad I did. I did buy the little cages for the down spouts. Thank you for your candor. I loved it!
I put the micro mesh Leaf Filter guards on my house 5 years ago & there is NO sand or anything in them. I just used the sticky tape on them to hold them down but, cleaned the edge with alcohol 1st. I have huge maple trees around my house & live in Michigan. I LOVE THEM!!!!
Located in Canada. Found your video AFTER looking for a clogging solution. Leaf filter came to my place, offered TWO senior discounts and a FB discount and it was still $28/ft installed !!!!. Hard to believe they sell so much at that price. Way more than I am willing to pay, especially when I did a previous place DIY for $3/ft
They're counting on a homeowner not being able to do 2 or 3 story roofs. Hell, you could rent a cherry picker and do it yourself for a quarter of what they charge! Highway robbery.
Look guys, Dmitry did great with this video. But I've been a gutter guy since 1993, and for the last 15 the only type of cover I will use is the type where I make it myself using the Van Mark trim a gutter tool, also I never interfere with the roof ever.... ever.. because I only use it if I can hang the gutter lower and attach upper part of cover just under the drip edge. Lmk if you want to see my system.
We tried the foam inserts and they worked great in light rains, HOWEVER, they were useless in the first heavy downpour and the overflow washed out or flower garden, pulled them out when it was over, we only installed them in the back gutters, and the gutters had a nice layer of roofing granules underneath. So we ended up cleaning out the gutters anyway. Live and learn.
i have have had foam in my 5 inch gutters for over 15 years and no problems and i am surrounded with maple trees which used to clog my downspouts. sometimes the leaves stem will stick in the foam but the wind will blow it free.
Extremely great information. I have over a 15 year time of owning my home I have gone to big box stores and tried different products. Currently I am using the lowest rated of the good table of products. I had a gutter company come by (Leaf Filter) I liked their product but as high pressure sale would go I did not like the price. I am now committed to installing something my self that is of better quality and filtration that would last 5 or more years not 1-3 years as the product on the bad table have.
Thanks, a very good presentation. You answered all the questions I had pertaining to the differences between gutter guard types and how they'd preform compared to each other.
My wife insisted that I install downspout strainers on a couple of runs of gutters. I didn't want to, but I also didn't want to fight over gutters. The strainers clogged in short order, causing the gutters to fill up and overflow when it was raining, and hold a trough of water when it wasn't raining. I took my eye off the ball on those gutters and the fascia rotted and the gutters ripped out and fell down. I've had better luck with the plastic flow-over gutters that Dmitry rated as second-worst junk, but I can't argue against what he said about them. Where possible, I have removed gutters entirely and installed egg-rock filled troughs in the ground at the drip line. That works the best for the situations where it can be properly installed.
My company uses SheerFlow 3 foot sections box of 50 from Menards. good quality vinyl screens with a layer of nylon mesh adhered to the top. After sliding them under the first row of shingles and clipping them to the front lip of the gutter, we put 3 zip screws in each screen on the lip (start, middle, end) and we have yet to be called back to fix a job where we installed covers in this manner. If you don’t want to have to go back and fix rejects, do it right the first time. The outlet strainer is way outdated and is just another excuse for companies to make money when they get called back to clean the debris out of the inevitably blocked gutters. No disrespect just trying to help y’all out
Owning a house is a lot of work if you want to do it right. I'm up the ladder twice a year (spring and fall) to inspect and clean. It takes me half an hour to do the job. I also use the cheap little strainers that stick in the downspouts. All those other products are garbage. If you are too old to climb then get a family member to go up there. Buy him a case of beer for the trouble.
Chris, i totally agree with you. I am 42 and i inspect 2 to 3 times per year. At 6:33, i recently purchased those. They wrk fine and fit my gutters well. I have 6 oak trees in my backyard and must check my gutters everso often. My neighbors just spent thousands on leaf guard, the prob is, she has trees hanging over her house. The leaves pile up on the gutters/guards and becomes stuck. I would never scew dwn my guards, too much wrk if there is a need to remove them. I dn't care how great the gaurd is, overtime, small particules build up. Leaf Filters are thieves....and yes, very aggresive. ***Plastics are no good if you have squirrels, like i do. I have a few plastic on the backside, need to change them (can only blame laziness).
I used the black aluminum ones from Loews on a house with a metal roof. They slid under the metal and snapped tightly to the lip of the gutter. I have 2 large trees in the front and 1 monster in the back we will see. They are very strong when pushed 2 in under the metal.
Great info thank you! I had an estimate by Leaf Filter yesterday. Very long (1hour) but good sales pitch but when I rejected their offer which started at $3300.00 then finally discounted to $2400.00+ for 70 total feet of all straight cover. When I objected to the price the sales person suddenly reduced the offer by $700.00 as a last resort which to me shows a lack of integrity. As a senior citizen that really ticked me off, if they would have offered it at that price to start instead of trying to take advantage of me I would have been much more likely to buy. Their product looked better than anything in your video but they were too aggressive.
This is one thing that I have against outfits with agressive/high pitch sales tactics anymore for home improvement, they immediately lose my business. They say how wonderful their product is over the competition so its a much better offer, then they offer 30% off, after haranguing you another hour "let me call my manager, oh heres another 30% off". I dont have the time or patience for it anymore. Last couple major projects (basement waterproofing then roof) I went with the no pressure sales, but essentially the highest bidders. Was worth pretty much every penny.
I've had the plastic variety - one of your last three. Contrary to your comments, they have not broken or failed badly, and in the right circumstances, mostly work well. The worst problem which I have on my current house is that the pitch is great enough that in a heavy rain the water runs over the top of the cover and not into the gutter, despite a slight raised lip that's supposed to stop that problem. There's definitely a gutter installation issue- too low. And I'd rather have granules fall through the holes than have the holes so small they can't handle a heavy rain.
Impressive- marking a comment as "loved" when the comment "disagrees" is rather unusual, and makes me MUCH more inclined to believe your material. Thanks!
Hi Nelson... Where do you live and about how many instances of heavy rain do you get each year? I'm in Portland, OR and while we get our share of the wet stuff, it's probably only 5-10x/yr that rain is so heavy, I'm actually concerned about water over-running the gutter.
@@TheBenners76 I'm in central New york, where our annual rainfall is about 41 inches, a bit more than you. Much of the rain is concentrated in spring. It's too bad it's not a bit earlier. Still, I'd just suggest installing 2 or 3 sections and see how they work. They're inexpensive and usually pretty easy to install unless the eaves are way up high. I wish you well.
I have to disagree on the strainer idea. I tried it and 2 weeks later my gutter was overflowing during a rainstorm. I checked it during that rainstorm and sure enough debris was clogged all around it not allowing it to drain whatsoever, so I pulled it out and the water shot down the downspout like it should. I am now just checking my gutters 2-3 times a year and cleaning out by hand.
I have a ranch house and have my young son( now 22 ) get on the roof and clean out the gutters. He can do the whole house in 15 minutes. I used to do it myself but am too old and fat to do it now. If you can not find anyone to do it, then use a j shaped extension on a blower and blow out the gutters. Then get on ladder and inspect in a few places. If you can not do any of this you will have to hire someone. Leaf covers are crap.
I installed seamless gutters for many years. I am qualified to tell you that using any kind of "Gutter Guard" is like putting Armor All on your valve stem caps! Lolol Just a way to get more $$$ from you pocket to someone else's pocket. Strainers do keep birds from building nests in the downspouts, but can block and fill gutters to very heavy weights. I don't sell gutter guards of any kind, I don't install it, I don't recommend it. Inspect your gutters and remove twigs and branches, then blow gutters out 2 or 3 times a year with a leaf blower and a gutter blower attachment, it's that easy. 2nd story gutters usually get enough wind to clear leaves when they are dry. The shingle granules are flushed by heavy rain provided your gutters have the proper pitch to the outlet drains. Flushing with a hose works verywell. The best gutters were the copper half round ones on old farmhouses, as they ever clog, the wind cleaned em just fine, they lasted for many, many years. Everything now is just made poorly. No magic cure, clean your gutters or have someone do it for you.
I have gutters that are 3 stories high in the back and size of my house ... I can't clean them multiple times a year. I'm getting too old for that. I want to try some chicken wire with say about 1/4 to 1/2 inch holes to try. Do they sell rolls of this?
Rick Sievers what you’re talking about is called hail screen or hardware cloth..comes in 1/2 or 1/4 squares but it’s gonna be hard to anchor it to the gutter and roof. you can cut it with tin snips but i don’t think you would be happy. 1/4” squares will let tree seeds like maple get caught and wet leaves will probably dry and attach to the mesh..good luck with what ever you chose, if someone would make a good reliable sysgem they could sell it cheap and still make a fortune..
So do you have any suggestions for the best gutters in today's market being that you said they are off lower quality than in past times? I ask because I'm getting a house built but didn't trust the builders to give me good quality gutters so I'll do it when they are done. Plus I thought they'd charge me an arm and a leg
My problem is... Composition Roofs shed a lot of grit each year. When I clean my gutters each fall, I use a metal kitty litter scoop for the leafs, and a child's small sand box shovel to shoveling out the dirt, mud, and piles of grit. I would not have access with these guards in place., and the crap would accumulate.
Most gutter guards that screw into the fascia come with rubber washers for the screws to prevent this. 20 years in business I've never had this happen.
I got the Ecoguard from Costco and they were bad. In the summer, the shingles granules would slip passed it and you see them all over the floor. This means the that the metal filter is filtering out every tiny little things. When it rains, the water runs right off the gutter guard so not much made it in the gutter. In the winter, they ice up and you get icicles everywhere
Here is the review that you never thought to mention. Here are three things to consider when getting gutters; pay the extra $$ to get bigger downspouts as it is well worth it. Never install any leaf guard product of any sort above your walkways or decks...opt instead to just clean the gutters as you really don't want all the roof debris deposited on your walking/living space unless you love to use the blower continually. Lastly, I have found that the Leaf guard gutters make a lot of noise in summer with contraction and expansion In the heat of the day, annoying. The house I now reside in has LEAF GUARD... I just called today to have them through warrantee come clean them, they are very nice to deal with but yes they definitely can clog especially in the Pacific Northwest.
I installed the white plastic slotted ones from HD about 15 years ago and they worked great until last winter when squirrels chewed through the ends and built nests. When I replaced them with metal mesh type the gutters were clean and in 15 years I had never cleaned them, so the design is great but needs to be metal. Also, I live in New England with lots of overhanging maple trees and snowy winters and the white plastic slotted ones held up great until the squirrel attack.
Thank you for this video. Was trying to decide between Lowes plastic with fine mesh and (more expensive) Raptor Guard stainless steel with micro mesh for my metal roof. Going with stainless. very much appreciate this video. Like my dad always says "Unless you're German, don't do it in plastic"
We've been using guards similar to the plastic brown ones in the video and they worked great for several years but are now starting to warp due to sun exposure. For some reason they don't make this style in aluminum which would solve the warping problem.
@@RoofingInsights3.0Insights you are so real and honest! I am going with Atlas Lowes, they have great reviews. I am going to try installing them myself. I would like your opinion of the Atlas System. I have a single story, tile roof. I will be using an 8-foot ladder. thank you
I leave my gutters open and hit them with the leaf blower a couple times a year. Takes 10 minutes. This works better then any guard system I have ever seen.
I think I'll do the same and just bypass the covers that will likely fail anyway. Will muck out twigs and leaves by hand and use power washer extension when damp or leaf blower when dry to clear the small bits. Thanks for the info and for helping me make a decision to not use any gutter guards just yet. All my woes are due to neighbor's wall of assorted tall trees bordering my guest house roofing. Fortunately the main house where gutters are too high for me to do myself are not near any trees and tend to stay clear.
really hard to do on a 2 and 3 story house. in fact in the 20+ years i've owned the house i've cleaned the top gutters 0 times., but the whole system needs to be changed. it has a 5"k style on it now I'm going to ask a 6" k style be put on. And a differnt downspout locations and larger downspouts.
Ha. I can't allow my gutters to remain open in the Spring or in the Fall because if I did, every downspout would clog up every time it rains during that time. In the Spring, I get billions of maple leaf helicopters and all the other trash from trees for about 3 or 4 weeks. I would have to clean them every time BEFORE it rains or I'd have problems. In the Fall, it's the same thing because of the leaves. I would have tons of problems with my downspouts clogging up and gutters running over if I left them open during these seasons.
I bought and installed the plastic gutter guards 37 years ago and have had no problems with leaves getting into my gutters, but small maple seeds did come through the diamond shaped holes. Last year I installed new plastic gutter guards with the fine mesh ($50 for 75 feet) and not even maple seeds can get into my gutters. Leaf guard would cost about $2200 for 300 feet of gutters on a one story house. I installed these myself for $200 dollars. I slid these under my shingles aand snapped them to my gutters. In Indiana we will have at times 80 to 100 mph winds---we have had know problems.
I own a gutter company and we have been using the expanded wire Armour Lock for years.They work well and are inexpensive. We use the 6" screens on a 5" gutter so we can slip them under the shingles instead of laying them on the hangers. This gives good pitch and lets the leaves blow off.
Steve Allen 20 years and ez lock and armour lock are solid guards inside valleys of the roof are the only weak points. May have to clean off debris over the top of the guard.
Excellent video! Thank you for your professional opinion on all the products carried by the major chain stores. This is exactly what I was interested in hearing.
I Agree with u, the sponge and white plastic that u said are the worst gutter guard, I did use them in my house and I was literally cleaning those gutters every time rains
The last two types that you showed one in white and one in brown I have installed on my house in White. They were installed in 2007. This Is 2020 currently and they have never failed I have big oak trees and maples near my house. Leaves sticks and acorns get on the roof and get washed Down the Roof to the top of the gutters with any water drainage. What seems to be something that nobody ever mentions is that the plastic ones that have the diamond cut holes and the screen mesh on top work wonderfully if you install them correctly with a notch of an inch and a half cutout of the gutter hook end so that way the mesh can overlap the previous run of the gutter guard. The white ones have been on my house I have had tree limbs hit them little and big and with the overlap none of them have failed or broken or torn or become degraded from Sun. Are they the best option... Maybe not... However installed correctly they work Wonderful! I went around the outside of the 1400 Square foot house and check each gutter section and Joint. I also pulled off one near each downspout and looked in as an inspection. Just like you said you will get granules in your gutter... However all roofs get granules in the gutter I don't care what gutter guard you have and with a good rain the granules get washed down the downspout anyway. So for the money the white plastic or PVC diamond cut holes with the screen over top are the best ones and have worked wonders and no problems ever since 2007 I have never had a leaf an or anything else clog the gutter or sit up there for more than a few days as the wind or another rainstorm will wash them right off the gutter guard. It all depends on how you install them and how smart you are to overlap them which gives them no gappage and strength. The only things that can get through are what you think can fit through the screen and believe me I have tried to fit pine needles leaves acorns sticks, none of them go through. So 13 years in use with no issues and no replacements and no breakage installed correctly with an overlap equals happy homeowner with no clog gutters!!
@@ignited814 yes if you take the plastic diamond cut pattern gutter guards that have the screen over top of them and you cut either end left or right depending on which way you are running them. Always start at the end of The Gutter with a full gutter guard, then the next one cut a notch off the bottom of the gutter guard where the lip Clips onto the gutter. cut a notch into the clip and then behind the clip cut where the screen is bonded to the plastic nearest the gutter guard clip about an inch and a half so that way the piece that you cut out slides up and butts up to the previous. Agard and you have an overlap of about an inch to an inch and a half of screening covering the joint between the two. Nothing ever gets in and it also strengthens the total gutter guard run down each gutter. Installation for these is the same way he said in the video underneath the shingle over top of the decking tar paper or water barrier that you have on the roof sheathing period. If you have Nails close to the edge it is easy enough to put the gutter guard up underneath the single and see exactly where a nail is and cut a notch in the gutter guard in order to make it slide up under the shingle and then slide back to the front of the gutter to clip it onto the gutter lip. The ends of the gutters if you have a run that has a higher or lower and where the roof is either very close or very far from the gutter you can be more creative with the plastic because it's easy to clip with a good pair of tin snips and it is easy to bend form and even if you need to tuck behind short Corner gutter or blind Corner gutter that doesn't have much roof overhang coverage to it. These are very cheap price wise. You can buy a case for under fifty bucks to 60 bucks. And when I say a case I do not mean the single box that they sell in the Shelf I'm talkin a full case which usually has somewhere between 70 to 90 gutter guard pieces. If you need more info comment me back.
@@dsrtodd , thanks for the info, just purchased my home in Polk County Florida 👍 I'm going to give it a try tomorrow. I plan on installing them wish me luck 🤞
On the first one, I believe that the lip that he wants to screw down, is actually held in place by the composite shingle. I had one similar and never had a problem with the lip that went under the shingle. The other side clamps onto the gutter edge.
Beg to differ re: foam filters. I installed them on the front of my house four years ago.(big maple over that area) There is a void area at the bottom which allows the water to flow freely. They install easily, they come out easily. Can't imagine having to remove a cover which has been screwed down under the shingles (which is a bad idea to begin with) every couple years to clean the gutters of the crap the cover didn't catch. Yes, after this period of time there is some deterioration of the top of the cover. A lot of collected garbage can be shaken out of them when removed. BUT, the bottom of the gutter is perfectly clear, meaning it has been performing during the entire time. Now, granted, I have a 4/12 pitch, which means the velocity of the water running off is not as high as a higher pitch, which allows the filter to catch the water. I'm sure this is a factor for all types. Nice thing is, because they are foam and completely flexible, changing contours do not affect performance. Note, they do collect pine needles, but likely, so do all the others. I consider these best option for homeowner installation. Like with everything else, you'll have to monitor it. Cost me about $90 for a 60' length. Even putting new ones in every 4-5 years compared to hundreds or even thousands of dollars...you decide. You have to remove all of them (virtually or literally) to clean them anyway. Could just put new ones in for a few bucks.
I have to agree. I also have the foam filter and it works GREAT !!!!!!!!!! We just have 4" of rain in 12 hours and the gutter foam filter worked well. The filter keeps every leaf, pine needle and maple seeds out of the gutters.
Armor lock работает идеально. Установил их лет 5-7 назад. Прикрутил их на внешний край gutter на 1-2 винта на каждую секцию. Даже мокрые листья или снег не продавят их.
I have been a gutter guy for 27 years, I built my current trailer to solve all those problems. I cannot explain it entirely here but there is really only one direction to create a system that actually is just as well built as any gutter, but it's not cheap or easy to figure out until it operates properly
I put in plastic gutter covers about 20 years ago. I think I got them at Menard's. They had a fine nylon mesh covering over the bigger holes. They were very cheap only costing about $20 to do my entire house. They worked very good but now I need to replace some of them because the nylon mesh covering wore away. They did allow some roof granules to enter the gutter so I still had to spray out my gutters about 1x a year. That was a huge improvement when previously I had to clean my gutters 5-6x's a year, as I have a lot of trees around my house. They were very easy to install and reasonably effective.
Get rid of the gutter guards...AND the gutters. Do a proper landscape treatment around your home, beds with mulch or stone and plant vegetation to absorb the water off the roof. Slope the perimeter at 6"/10 ft. for drainage, preferably with a "clay cap" for 4 ft. from the house, but any less erode-able soil/mulch.stone will do. Use an edging (stone or concrete preferred) to contain the mulch/stone.
Stupid to not have gutters, the reason for gutters tis to drain the water away from your foundation, mine have 5 foot extensions to move the water away from the house and plant beds are you trying to drown your plants or have water frozen around your foundation or do you live in Arizona where it rains 5 times a year.
What a great job, thank you. You just made me feel a lot better about NOT buying this and now cleaning the gutters twice a year seems tolerable. Keep up the good work, sir.
I purchased the Leaf Filter guards but it was a long battle with a very aggressive salesperson. I have a lot of experience with corporate negotiating, so took it as a challenge and ultimately paid less than a third of their starting price. As an engineer I appreciate the design, and they have performed very well on the house for several years now. Just know you don't have their best price until they literally walk out of the house and start to drive away. Shame that such a nice design is such a pain to purchase.
I just bought some, I refuse to pay someone to install them and I'm finding out these things are very difficult to install. I hate gutter guards beyond belief but I'll have to spend over $1,000 to have them installed and that is just a rip off and I don't care who you are or what you think (to you installers out there). That's way too much just to install 88 ft of it. I think I'm just going to deal with cleaning them every couple of weeks. It's less work lol.
@@TJ-ve8svSo you’re saying that it’s super hard to install to the point that you gave up, but a business is ripping you off if they try to charge accordingly. Hmmm
@@TJ-ve8svso, how do you figure that 'very difficult' = cheap? Did you not hear him say you can pay 30/40$ LF? Sometimes we like things we can't afford, and that's ok, but we all over pay somehow for things we use and eat on daily basis, that in the end, end up in the toilet.
I really like this video. I may try installing these for customers and would certainly shy away from the sponge and anything plastic. UV light would dry out and crack the plastic in short order.
I would like one of the cheap plastic ones with the fine mesh. I don’t mind cleaning the gutters every 3 years because without the gutter guard, I clean them 3 times a year :D
All but one style will not allow you to use a high pressure hose to blow out mold and algae growing in the gutter. The meah and small hole versions block the pressure ad you will have to remove the gutter guard completely to clean it.
i was using the plastic mesh for 27 years on my gutters and do not have any problem just do the roof and my gutter look like new the small debris will wash out by rainwater and chuted down
For many people, the challenge is avoiding cleaning gutters due to challenges with safety and physical conditioning and this is balanced by costly gutter cleaners who do a lousy job half of the time (and you don't know which half of the time unless you inspect personally). If gutter guards require observation, they are not that helpful. Once I am inspecting a gutter, I might as well stick my hand in the muck and clean it.
I see an ad for a local company advertising a gutter guard to keep leaves from clogging your gutters have a screen. My only thing about an anti leaf gutter is that no roof has only leaves. Dirt will go through those guards and clog the gutter eventually.