In this video, I just show a quick install of some drip edging and how to cut corners. As always thanks for watching! Catch you on the next one! Yo Sonny!!! my-store-10694... high_ridge_handyman blog.feedspot....
@@HighRidgeHandyman I've watched several other videos where they hack the edges to death - yours is simple simon, no sharp edges, and beautiful. I read the comment about tucking under the piece, something I shall do. I am re-tarring and papering backyard patio roof (Never having done anything like that) and am learning how via video's like yours. Thank you for the video! Oh, and now I know I need tin snips!
Good job only problem I see is the first corner is supposed to go under versus over the second corner was done correctly I appreciate your demonstration it will help me to do my roof .
Shawn Maxx thanks I did realize the first was over instead of under. Thanks for watching. If I could edit this I would. Or even add a clip. Have a good holiday weekend
"SEEMS SIMPLE ENOUGH BUT I, VE SCREWED IT UP A COUPLE OF TIMES" THANK,S FOR VIDEO!! I took a picture so when in doubt look at the picture; thank,s again Patrick P
On the corner you also need a cut at the bottom through to the other bend in the metal and that way your lip/ bottom bend will not flatten out when you bend the metal.
If you have fascia under this the corner here can cause water running down the fascia corner. I don't know the solution but the solution is what I am looking for.
What do you do when your roof line is 10 feet 6 inches and only 10 foot edges are available. Ok, I know you overlap with another piece, but how do you make it look "professional"?
From what I've read, typically the drip edge on the eave goes down first, then the asphalt paper overlaps that drip edge, and *then* the rake drip edge goes on, covering the paper. So the rakes and eaves should be two separate pieces. Nice job on bending the corner, though - that's helpful for other applications!
One thing to keep in mind. If a gutter is going to be installed, it usually gets tucked under the Drip edge. The gutter people will cut the Drip edge to get the gutter to reach the corner of the roof or even go past by ½ inch. My point the eve (Drip edge) should be its own piece and the rake Drip edge should be its own piece.
U should do the bottom first cut the kick just a little then u cut into the top of the bottom drip edge 3/4 and fold then cut the rake at the angel. Think like a rain drop
I do it the gangster way, tab and miter not cut and fold. but I also do alot more 24 gauge and standing seam. currently doing zinc coated copper panels on a big commercial project (3year project) and zinc coated copper wall panels. I also do pvc, tpo, modified torch down, cold process, epdm, only thing I don't touch is shingles. I call them guys shingleberries
The drip on the left side should have the bottom underneath the lap? As you show the water comes down on that left corner and will go into/underneath the eave curve?
One cut across the top edge at the corner then fold it around corner. Btw the first corner I should have overlapped like the second to prevent future water getting underneath.
First corner was put down incorrectly it had to be flipped over and it’s been almost a year and there is not one drop of water anywhere underneath! Thanks for watching take care be safe
rake and eave metal should be 2 pieces since underlayment goes on top of eave metal but under rake metal. also, if gutters are to be installed you cant get them under the eave metal if it is continuously wrapped around and up the rakes
Unless your installing epdm rubber roof, you can fold your epdm over the fascia board then istall drip edge and then cover with cover tape all the way around on top of drip edge flange. But yeah
I have seen videos where they cut the ends of the eave drip edge a bit...and fold them back...then the rake drip edge just lays over that on each corner. yours obviously wraps around....I guess my question is...is one better, or is it just personal preference. Your looks better for sure. But is the a best way to do it.
@@HighRidgeHandyman that's exactly what I did after this video. Whatever I do it's going to be what it's going to be. I got some snips, some pieces of drip edge and a shed that needs a new roof. So something is bound to happen as soon as it stops raining.
Very well done Trip Dip!! It's nice to see the folded over corners rather then when hacks chop it up into multiple pieces. Hope all is well & Dirty Jersey out!!!
I'm doing a porch for someone. The linear edge is much longer, probably 19 feet total to get all of it done, but I don't know if I can go from side to edge. Just wondering if the best application is to do one short corner (does not have much of a rake on the back non-curb side appeal). Should I wrap around and join on the side, or center on the eave and get two good round corners and then snap straight pieces up each rake flush to the house siding?
@@HighRidgeHandyman That's what I was leaning towards after several videos and finishing with yours. Definitely makes working around the Ice Barrier and not having to lift up the rakes that were tacked on a thing I won't have to contend with -- just those bends which I can lift slightly and tuck under. Thanks for the reply in this crazy time of day (COVID19). Appreciate it.
That's a beautiful install method but what If the homeowner ever decides to get gutters. Won't they have to cut it on that corner to get the gutters in?
STOCKBOY7254 I use both. If I’m putting up a gutter I make sure the drip edge is pulled away from the facia and it’s over hanging into the gutter so the water runs off into the gutter. If you leave the drip edge against the wall when installing the gutter the water will run off the roof and follow the drip edge behind the gutter and eventually rot the wood. But for a small overhang like this one I’d just have the drip edge with no gutter. Good luck stockboy thanks for watching 👍
@@HighRidgeHandyman The only reasons I'm asking is the leafs,acorns,branches are clogging my gutters.Someone told me the leaf guard gutter systems no good.Im 69 years old been up to clean the gutters 3 times its very dangerous gutters are high.Any ideas?
You did the first corner wrong the sloping piece should end up over the horizontal piece. Any water running down the edge can potentially run under the front piece.
WARNING..... "cutting a corner" is exactly what you doing. This method does not comply with shingle manufacturers' installation instructions for drip edge. Read them for yourself.
Adina Bogdan I reversed the drip edge corner so the water would run off. As for the cement or silicone while having the roofing paper would be overkill for this small overhang. Maybe you post a how to video to help us all out👍
Paper goes over the drip edge at the eave and under at the rake depending on what state you are roofing in. Some states all underlayment goes under metal. But this video was to demonstrate metal installation
Never do that. You can't install aluminum fascia and or trough properly because it's tonight. I see this often and take an freaking chisel to it and split
It was supposed to say to tight. I run into it all the time. Guys think they are doing something good but it's not. Unless you leave it proud of fascia. And most roofers also pull starter to tight to fascia everywhere and we can't get aluminum fascia on properly, which makes the idea of it being a drip edge redundant