Great job!! I had to put a 16 by 20 tarp on my roof by myself, I’m a 65 year old woman! I got it done with my Guardian Angels help! Roofers deserve to get HIGH WAGES! 🥰 Make us proud little girl!! You are awesome!!!
@@giocorrea77333no soy FEMINAZI, ni nada q se le parezca, pero en ocaciones si trabajan más q un hombre...yo tengo una en presa de ESTE GIRO, y mi mejor trabajador, es una mujer, xq siempre ha trabado MAS, en todo sentido, llega más temprano, se retira más tarde, tiene más experiencia, criterio y sentido común muy atinado y por lógica GANA MUCHO MÁS QUE TODOS.
@@christianpolanco9769obvio , las mujeres son muchísimo más cumplidoras...estás verdaderas mujeres...que hacen todo y con pasión cueste lo que cueste...cualquier trabajo eh,n cualquiera ...este es más valorable... Super ! Y esta mujer lo da todo en su labor ! Si está bien remunerada , merecido lo tiene !
Pretty awesome when you're getting paid to do this. I did it for free with my Dad when I was a kid. Bonus now is I can do a DIY project on my own roof no problem. 😉 👷
I helped my friend before do one we laid the tar paper down then started the shingles from one corner at the bottom and worked our way to the ridge Doing roof work is not one of my favorite jobs to do i can do it though if the roof ever gets a hole in it
ha ha! i am 55 year old gal installing 4 skylights and a new roof (shinhles wood..) and its looking awesome. its PERFECTLY measured and cut. had to fix errors made by gge dudes!
Not gonna lie you would have beat just about everybody that works for me! you definitely understand what you're doing and do it very efficiently. nicely done! I do most everything the same from the ice shield to tacking the bottom of the synthetic. don't over staple though since you guys are shingling already. I'm sure ya'll are getting that done today so no point in me telling you to dry in around the penetrations better, you'll get it with extra ice shield when you're there right? good job. If you want more fans, don't fast forward and talk about it as you do it.
She is great however specs say Iceguard has to be a minimum of 2 ft past the inside of interior wall. most houses including bungalows that would mean at least 3 and 1/2 ft of Iceguard. Also most manufacturers require cap nails in synthetic underlayment. All our jobs (I admit we do huge projects compared to these little houses so the margins for profit are greater)require manufacturers' specs to be followed to the letter.Including Iceguard around all penetrations,5*5*8 step tins etc.Plus the OSHA requirements are required all the time.(Yeah it's a pain,time consuming but important). We would probably hire her as a journeyman roofer in a minute though.33.25 an hour plus 20 extra in beneys.She would run circles around a lot of people I see
amazing job. i enjoy watching all your videos. one question: you put thousands of staples on the underlayment. How can the underlayment water proof any more? this kind of material is not like ice and water proof layment, it can not seal by itself.
Yup....i see some people sealling all joints, nails and what not.....and than they put wall finish as siding, or roof , and than they nailed the material all over again 😂😂😂
West coast pouring rain. We don't staple the middle. The little rips love my prime staplers. Bostitch Stanley springs come out way too often. And double the price.
@@franciscogonzalez4801 I heard someone say that before, within a week he was on the ground knocked out with a broken collar bone. 15 foot fall to the ground. Knocked his boots off (I guess they weren't tied?). But I saw it coming - and warned him before - not to put his back towards an edge , he said he "knew what he was doing".
the speed sound kills me hahah sounds funny... i didnt know u had to staple ice and water tho..usually i just do the top side cause it will be covered by the next row of paper and the ice/water is suppose to stick to the deck anyways, but i guess this works to, maybe we do it the way i do to have less holes in the ice and water, from the staples.. but i guess no different then staples in the felt paper.....
With ice and water it doesn't really matter if you staple it anywhere. Cause it will seal around the staple holes. With synthetic paper it won't, that's why yoits recommended to use a cap nailer, or if you still use a stapler just staple on the top overlap a bunch and every 5ft on the bottom overlap. Nothing in the field
No se necesita ningun poder solo habilidad, lo único que demostró fue su total desprecio por la vida al no usar ningún elemento de seguridad que le impida caer de ese techo.
@@salpacheco2532 so I had the small pin nail stinger . The caps would shatter if it was to cold. If under the right application in sure the caps would last more then a winter season. They'd bounce back.
Not bad for a girl. The only thing I don't like on the video is the use of staples...wait till a drop of water goes thru the shingles and you 'll find a lot of leaks inside the house. I'm saying this because it happened to us in California... Most of the pro roofers out here do not use synthetic felt any more due to the down side of not being a water proofing membrane. I dare you to make a test...nail down an area with synthetic underlayment and staples and hose it off simulating a heavy storm and check your plywood under how wet it gets. On the other side do the same with 30 lbs felt nailed down with plastic cap nails and hose it off with heavy water and check the sheathing under ... You'll find no water drips. When you install roofs on a 5 to 10 million dollar homes ...you don't mess around with cheap materials. I guess speed it what it matters up north.. The best part of the video is the skills of the lady on the video!! Thumbs up. Really impressed with the knowledge Try to use felt guys and in the long run . will save you a ton of head aches. Greetings from California. Eric Garcia