Thanks for watching, if you found this helpful please subscribe. New videos every Saturday. Watch the entire series 👉🏼 ruclips.net/p/PL34cQkzKfXWZjAohJEWQ4WD6LUXxH904u Cheers!
Just finished watching this video, and it's a total guide for shed enthusiasts like me. The step-by-step instructions made shingle installation look way less daunting, and I actually feel confident about tackling it on my own now!
I would have let the first row overhang more than the 1/4th inch. When I was a roofer 20+ years ago, we typically used a 1" over hang. It helped get the rain away from the wood. I don't know about the architectural shingles, but with the 3 tab ones we used, there was a small cut along the top edge near either end that would help with the alignment, so that the tabs all lined up correctly as you went up the roof. As others have said, you need to chalkline in starting lines to keep things square as well. Your shed is small enough it would show too much, but on a large roof, getting off by a small amount can accumulate into a noticeable misalignment. Under 3/12 pitch, don't use shingles, water doesn't run off fast enough on that flat a roof so it's more likely to weep back under the shingles. We usually waited until a side was done to go back and trim the ends as well. At the peak you need to run shingles up until the tar line will be under the ridge cap, so that the edges of the cap will adhere. Nice looking shed.
Definitely should of used a drip edge all the way around, really helps add support out farther past the side to help get water to run off farther out, and should of shown people to add roof sealant to last couple exposed nails on ridge cap
@@natersalad889 It's also super easy to install compared to the taping he's doing. Been doing roofing for 15 years and never had issues with drip edge curling like he described
Need to chalk lines for the starter course. Usually 11-1/4” from edge of roof at both the eve and takes. Otherwise your shingles will run wild over a large area.
@@anianii "Need to chalk lines for the starter course. Usually 11-1/4” from edge of roof at both the eve and takes. Otherwise your shingles will run wild over a large area."
After watching your give away, the gift you wrapped.... you sir , are a responsible perfectionist.... only downside.. if you had just stuck with sparkling water to drink
This is where some scaffolding would come in handy. LOL. I'm still not a fan of the shingles. I prefer metal roofing. But I live in an area that gets a lot of rain and hardly ever gets snow. I just noticed that my dog was watching the video with me. He seems to like Jeff. LOL. I've heard you can use old/scrap asphalt shingles as shims under plywood subfloor if your joists are uneven or need shimming for some reason.
Love the snap off hook blades. Never seen those, and I'd always used (back when I was a teen and did roofing to pay for university) a solid utility knife and you need a screwdriver to change the hook blades. I don't remember ever putting a reverse shingle on the side. We only ever did that on the bottom course. Most shingles have a little slice on the top that you can use for positioning the next one when you start a row (flick it up to butt up against the cut tab.)
next time bring a scrap 1x10 or 1x12 you can lay the shingles on to cut instead of trying to cut them mid air. it helps a lot and you can even put a framing square down for nice square cuts along the blade.
A decade or so ago, a team of us re-roofed a VERY large roof spanning two trailers for a family during our Appalachian Service Project week. We partially sheathed the roof, adding the last few sheets remaining from the prior team's efforts, then shingled the entire roof (probably 2,000 sqft) all in a week. We actually worked so fast we ran the project out of materials. We did not have a nail gun. I was the only one who had studied the instruction book, so I was tasked with step flashing the brick chimney. To be honest, I did an awful job. At lunch one afternoon, I sat in a tree at the end of the roof and sited down the last few rows of shingles we had installed. Don't do that. Looked like a drunken sailor! I ended up suffering from tennis elbow from hammer use that week. But it was some of the most fun I've ever had!
We used to do that reversed sheet edge in Finland as well but now manufacturers have changed the instructions and instead you're to use a special edgestrip (which honestly looks like a tape roll of sheeting material), not sure why but I my guess would be that shingles won't last as well with ice and snow when right at the edge. Also the under rolls should go up and over the roof from both sides or use an extra roll for it, shingle toping alone over the crown is not considered a sufficent water barrier. Also the sheet metal edge plate should go under the shingles so installed first (ice again), on the sides it can be placed either way but I prefer the edge to be over the plate.
Have wach 90% of your video's when I need to how to do something right, step by step. I wound prefer to put on a metal roof. Do you have a video on how to install one? Keep up the very informative videos!
Nice work Jeff, for all the people who have opinions it would be more informative if you posted a video with a link. So we can better our work, posting a comment is easy. Getting infront of a camera explaining and showing your work to all is hard work. Jeff walks the walk doesn't just talk the talk.
Spot on. Way too many know it alls that are probably doing this stuff for a living and overcharging people and probably aren’t even doing that great of a job.
Wow! you explain each step in a way that's easy to understand and the visuals really help. This video is a must-watch for anyone tackling roofing projects.
Looks great! Especially by yourself bring up all those shingles (weight up that ladder)! Very impressed and it looks good. I learned a lot and will continue to learn watching your videos!
pushed my garbage down once and forgot I had a snapped off blade in there. felt like a bee sting on my thumb, blood all over the kitchen. careful with those things! much love and great video
Everybodys talking about code this and that. Its a shed, who cares. If it still looks good in 20 years I guess he was right. Anyways I tend to like this guy the way he does things. Never has he steered me in the wrong direction.
I get the odd job to do a small roof leak repair on sheds etc. I am not a roofer, but I love doing those jobs. Just feels so relaxing being up there on your own making a nice repair in peace.
Jeff question? I actually really like steel roofing. Why wouldn't you consider steel or do you not mind? I think its simple and less risk. And a lot more durable. A dabb of calke on the screws will save the rubber on the screws as long as it holds up. There are fewer fasteners. It holds up to heat better if painted white. Even the fasteners can be preserved with paint. Just need a solid arrangement here on that. Price or quality. Maybe it's just the installation that's a nightmare? I have a fairly simple roof.
As always great video You are the go to guy when I want to learn anything DIY which is every week. Please keep up the great work and videos. Have a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.
Yes, use a pry bar to take the shingles out and replace with like color shingle. If it's an old roof you'll have trouble color matching because roof color fades.
you probably could have used GAF ice and water peel and stick for $80 and did the whole roof. In a snow zone with that pitch of roof you would want that anyways. Just my opinion tho.
down in the south east US i only see regular nails and the plastic washer things i sometimes see for the tarpaper instead of staples. unless they actually do make washer type nails for a nail gun specific for shingles.
Great video! Your videos have popped up in my feed and I've watched quite a few of them. Just subbed and 👍! Keep up the great DIY stuff. Just bought a home a year ago so I like this kind of stuff.
Florida stopped allowing us to do low pitch 2 /12 or 3/12 pitch. There used to be shingles just for that! Now You have to do rolled roofing ! What kind of shingles can you use? I don’t think u can even get a 25 lb here. Most people get the over 30 lb shake look. Most people don’t really understand that it’s the underpayment that really protects the roof , especially tile roofs that are for looks and expensive to fix even if u have someone who is a pro on walking on them without breaking any:-) some still break! Gail
@Home Renovision DIY Jeff, on the back side of the shingles I bought there is this thin plastic strip at one end. Do all shingles come with it. I am not seeing it on yours or at least I am not seeing you taking it off. Do I need to take it off before installing it?
Curious, why not use Ice and Dam instead of just roofing paper. And, no drip edge? I know your doing this on the cheap. But, having a roof fail on any application sucks. Speaking from experience. I did my first roof on the cheap. Lucky for me in was on a 14 x 10 shed and the tear off and repair was painful and expensive. I live in MN and the climate is much like yours. I say spend a little more and have less to worry about in the future... and ice and dam paper lessens leaks if installed correctly. I would even put 2 roof vents on the back half not seen by the house. I am jealous of that nailer. Had to do mine by hand... Still nice work and Thank You :)
Because it's a shed and the pitch is enough where you really don't need ice and water guard. I would've done a synthetic underlayment instead of tar paper but it works for his project. Hand nailed will always be better than nail guns anyway, most "roofing companies" don't even set the pressure correctly and half the nails go through the shingle or hit a crack
24 mins in, when you come to a gable edge and you end up being short up to 3 inches, you can do what's called a push, if you follow a 5 5/8s stagger, you can cut a 3rd of your shingles off and use the two pieces to push your course off the edge. Thus not leaving you with a small inch and a half trip has no wind strength and is more of a potential problem.
Actually, the sheathing was 5/8" (at 1:37:14 in the 4 hour video). Of course they come through. All those sheds at Home Depot have hundreds of nails poking out the other side, inside the building. I used a sandwich of 7/16" sheathing on top, with a half inch foam in the middle and a 2.7 mm plywood face on the bottom. No nails show through.
Just FYI... The top of the shingles have tiny slits to bump the next row so you get an even spacing without measuring. Are there really that many crickets?
I'm confused. No drip edge, ok but no starter strips? Sealed ridge, no soffit. just cut pieces. Just a shed but a soffit gives the protection, ventilation and would allow you add a simple rain chain.
@@tay13666 The 3-tab should be ripped in half so you get adhesive at the edge otherwise it can lift. Edges too, not just the bottom. You can buy strips if you don't want to make all the cuts.
29.05 your rows look pretty good but your ridge cap might have benefitted from snapping a chalk line on front. Overall decent appearance. Shingles are clearly a budget brand but meeeh, it’s a shed
Traditionally you start from left to right. But , have seen it done right to left. Just saying; not finger pointing but I own my own Roofing and construction company. it works though. starter strips is now the way to start out with and a short piece to help offset the shingles.Sorry but I am picky - lol.Five nail is what we do here also. Felt paper is old school for sure. Synthetic is their new way - more expensive but really good.
left to right as in standing on the ground looking at the roof or standing on the roof and looking down at the ground? And also is there a specific reason for this? do the patterns come together better or something on specialty shingles?
Old couch cushions! Take the foam pad out of an old couch. Our professional roof team uses cushions all day every day. They grip the roof, you can kneel or sit. Scoot them along without damaging the shingles.
speed comes from experience, and experience comes from practice. I've seen professionals who are fast but do a poor job, no shame in working at your own pace.
Agreed. Took me a summer (part time) to reroof my house. I’m slow but that roof isn’t going to leak and nail placement was always in the nail strip, correct position. Way better than the “professional” installation I was replacing.
22:22 you should NOT nail within 6inches to the edge of the shingle, those are all potential leaks - anywhere two shingles have a butt joint, water WILL work its way into the crack and up under the shingles… if there’s a nail hole two close to that butt joint it can leak… if you absolutely have to put a nail there, use a tiny piece of ice and water barrier either under the nail or even over the nail to seal out water
Hey quick question. Have you ever used roof silicone paint? The brand "Marlin Coatings" specifically. I have a roof, it's up in age, and it's leaking everywhere all the sudden. The shingles are still good enough and still flexible, but the roof leaks. To replace everything seems too much work for no good reason. The shingles are good, they are already there, but they leak through the nails that hold them in place. My thoughts are to change the color of my roof from shingle black to silicone tan, and fix a butt load of problems in the process, starting with the leaks then ending with,,, well tan color I guess. Point is question is, have you any experience with this silicone paint? Cheers 🍻
Mark my word, if they won’t deliver the shingles on the roof, get someone younger to carry them up. My husband used to carry a square on his shoulders and he was only in his early 50’s when shoulders were replaced , knees, hips , so take it easy now. You won’t be this age forever! I know this is a shed but on homes do u our metal under or over the valleys?
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Going into the trading world without the help of a PROFESSIONAL, trader and expecting profit is a 0.5% chances of win rate, that's why i trade with Mrs, Karen Gaye Gray her skills set is exceptional.
The sound of the bugs in the video and the sound of the bugs outside my window are going in-and-out of sync with each other and it's kind of freaking me out.
Should have drip edge at eve first, felt goes over eve drip edge and under the rake pieces of drip edge. If the roof is a 3/12 or less must have ice and water on entire roof surface. Also shingles should not be installed in less then a 3/12 period.
Thanks for watching, if you found this helpful please subscribe. New videos every Saturday. Watch the entire series 👉🏼
ruclips.net/p/PL34cQkzKfXWZjAohJEWQ4WD6LUXxH904u Cheers!
Just finished watching this video, and it's a total guide for shed enthusiasts like me. The step-by-step instructions made shingle installation look way less daunting, and I actually feel confident about tackling it on my own now!
Waiiit a minute... I have snow on my lawn 😂. Thank you for warming us up.
I would have let the first row overhang more than the 1/4th inch. When I was a roofer 20+ years ago, we typically used a 1" over hang. It helped get the rain away from the wood. I don't know about the architectural shingles, but with the 3 tab ones we used, there was a small cut along the top edge near either end that would help with the alignment, so that the tabs all lined up correctly as you went up the roof. As others have said, you need to chalkline in starting lines to keep things square as well. Your shed is small enough it would show too much, but on a large roof, getting off by a small amount can accumulate into a noticeable misalignment. Under 3/12 pitch, don't use shingles, water doesn't run off fast enough on that flat a roof so it's more likely to weep back under the shingles. We usually waited until a side was done to go back and trim the ends as well. At the peak you need to run shingles up until the tar line will be under the ridge cap, so that the edges of the cap will adhere. Nice looking shed.
Jeff's sharp utility knives are like discovering legendary weapons..
15:40 when you kneel down, the whole thing shakes. I was like "YIKES!!".
bro only sheathed one wall all the rest is just cross supported to "save money" I never seen that in my life to save 300 bucks.
@@WolfDogNHYeah, I was thinking I'd pay the extra money for the extra sheathing for the wall integrity.
Definitely should of used a drip edge all the way around, really helps add support out farther past the side to help get water to run off farther out, and should of shown people to add roof sealant to last couple exposed nails on ridge cap
💯 Both good tips to help add longevity. No sense in just going halfway.
@OriginalBrett610 especially for how cheap drip edge is, it's just crazy someone would not use it voluntarily
@@natersalad889 It's also super easy to install compared to the taping he's doing. Been doing roofing for 15 years and never had issues with drip edge curling like he described
Need to chalk lines for the starter course. Usually 11-1/4” from edge of roof at both the eve and takes. Otherwise your shingles will run wild over a large area.
Did you even watch the video or did you just come here to comment stuff like that?
@@anianii I agree with @andrewschafer8986. I didn't a see any chalk lines. There was several odd things jumping off the screen.
@@xmassan20906 He didn't do any chalk lines, and he explained why he doesn't need them in that case. So I don't see the issue with that…
@@anianii "Need to chalk lines for the starter course. Usually 11-1/4” from edge of roof at both the eve and takes. Otherwise your shingles will run wild over a large area."
I think he was using the "line on the tar paper" as a chalk line. Not the same thing, but functional for him somehow. Success.
Putting a drip edge allows you to have something to tuck under if you decide you want to clad your fascia in metal or put gutters later.
I'm not even a construction guy, and I like this video🫡
Jeff-- sunglasses and a hat! Keep up the great vids!
After watching your give away, the gift you wrapped.... you sir , are a responsible perfectionist.... only downside.. if you had just stuck with sparkling water to drink
This is where some scaffolding would come in handy. LOL. I'm still not a fan of the shingles. I prefer metal roofing. But I live in an area that gets a lot of rain and hardly ever gets snow.
I just noticed that my dog was watching the video with me. He seems to like Jeff. LOL.
I've heard you can use old/scrap asphalt shingles as shims under plywood subfloor if your joists are uneven or need shimming for some reason.
Love the snap off hook blades. Never seen those, and I'd always used (back when I was a teen and did roofing to pay for university) a solid utility knife and you need a screwdriver to change the hook blades.
I don't remember ever putting a reverse shingle on the side. We only ever did that on the bottom course.
Most shingles have a little slice on the top that you can use for positioning the next one when you start a row (flick it up to butt up against the cut tab.)
next time bring a scrap 1x10 or 1x12 you can lay the shingles on to cut instead of trying to cut them mid air. it helps a lot and you can even put a framing square down for nice square cuts along the blade.
A decade or so ago, a team of us re-roofed a VERY large roof spanning two trailers for a family during our Appalachian Service Project week. We partially sheathed the roof, adding the last few sheets remaining from the prior team's efforts, then shingled the entire roof (probably 2,000 sqft) all in a week. We actually worked so fast we ran the project out of materials. We did not have a nail gun. I was the only one who had studied the instruction book, so I was tasked with step flashing the brick chimney. To be honest, I did an awful job. At lunch one afternoon, I sat in a tree at the end of the roof and sited down the last few rows of shingles we had installed. Don't do that. Looked like a drunken sailor! I ended up suffering from tennis elbow from hammer use that week.
But it was some of the most fun I've ever had!
We used to do that reversed sheet edge in Finland as well but now manufacturers have changed the instructions and instead you're to use a special edgestrip (which honestly looks like a tape roll of sheeting material), not sure why but I my guess would be that shingles won't last as well with ice and snow when right at the edge. Also the under rolls should go up and over the roof from both sides or use an extra roll for it, shingle toping alone over the crown is not considered a sufficent water barrier. Also the sheet metal edge plate should go under the shingles so installed first (ice again), on the sides it can be placed either way but I prefer the edge to be over the plate.
You sir… are the PAUL GIAMATTI of DIY!!❤
I use an old paper cutter to cut my shingles for the steps. It works great! shingles must be slightly cool to work the best, though
5 and 5/8ths stagger is the way, it's creates a perfect 7 step book in 4 shingles, which is your bottom 4 rows you mentioned to get off the edge.
Thanks for the great vid! Before this, I was installing shingles on the inside
Have wach 90% of your video's when I need to how to do something right, step by step. I wound prefer to put on a metal roof. Do you have a video on how to install one? Keep up the very informative videos!
3rd or 4th video I’ve watched on this and this was the most understandable. Thanks sir
Nice work Jeff, for all the people who have opinions it would be more informative if you posted a video with a link. So we can better our work, posting a comment is easy. Getting infront of a camera explaining and showing your work to all is hard work. Jeff walks the walk doesn't just talk the talk.
Spot on. Way too many know it alls that are probably doing this stuff for a living and overcharging people and probably aren’t even doing that great of a job.
Another great video Jeff. Love your humor.
Wow! you explain each step in a way that's easy to understand and the visuals really help. This video is a must-watch for anyone tackling roofing projects.
Looks great! Especially by yourself bring up all those shingles (weight up that ladder)! Very impressed and it looks good. I learned a lot and will continue to learn watching your videos!
After all this, my wife just told me to put on a metal roof! Yes! A very good suggestion!
pushed my garbage down once and forgot I had a snapped off blade in there. felt like a bee sting on my thumb, blood all over the kitchen. careful with those things!
much love and great video
Everybodys talking about code this and that. Its a shed, who cares. If it still looks good in 20 years I guess he was right.
Anyways I tend to like this guy the way he does things. Never has he steered me in the wrong direction.
I like a straight blade for 3tab but architectural the hook blades are better I do agree. Thanks for this video again.
I love this man's laugh. lol
me too..
Thanks so much I’m building a shed and this Jost tape idea will help me get out of problem that I maid
I get the odd job to do a small roof leak repair on sheds etc. I am not a roofer, but I love doing those jobs. Just feels so relaxing being up there on your own making a nice repair in peace.
Jeff question? I actually really like steel roofing. Why wouldn't you consider steel or do you not mind? I think its simple and less risk. And a lot more durable. A dabb of calke on the screws will save the rubber on the screws as long as it holds up. There are fewer fasteners. It holds up to heat better if painted white. Even the fasteners can be preserved with paint.
Just need a solid arrangement here on that.
Price or quality. Maybe it's just the installation that's a nightmare? I have a fairly simple roof.
00:11:05 Buck and Rope !
I played your video at 2x speed.
How you are a pro roofer.😂
Nice job Jeff!!!
As always great video You are the go to guy when I want to learn anything DIY which is every week. Please keep up the great work and videos. Have a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.
All these critics say so much its a shed let the man do it in the way he wants to
They are just guys trying to prove how smart they are (not). I guess Daddy (or Tom Silva) never gave them enough attention!
Can you replace individual shingles without taking the whole thing down?
Yes. You use a skinny spatula to pull the nails
Yes, use a pry bar to take the shingles out and replace with like color shingle. If it's an old roof you'll have trouble color matching because roof color fades.
you probably could have used GAF ice and water peel and stick for $80 and did the whole roof. In a snow zone with that pitch of roof you would want that anyways. Just my opinion tho.
Hey Jeff, don't you use the roofing nails with the big plastic washers there in Canada?
down in the south east US i only see regular nails and the plastic washer things i sometimes see for the tarpaper instead of staples. unless they actually do make washer type nails for a nail gun specific for shingles.
I never heard of that, I thought those were for foam on the exterior walls.
called capnails. They use those here in Texas.
Usually those are only used for the underlayment, he uses the stapler instead. Inch and a quarter are pretty standard for asphalt shingles.
22:20 Under 4:12 you may want to check if your product requires more underlayment/prep or, if some type of membrane system's recommended.
Great video! Your videos have popped up in my feed and I've watched quite a few of them. Just subbed and 👍! Keep up the great DIY stuff. Just bought a home a year ago so I like this kind of stuff.
Not bad for a DIY job!
Florida stopped allowing us to do low pitch 2 /12 or 3/12 pitch. There used to be shingles just for that! Now
You have to do rolled roofing !
What kind of shingles can you use? I don’t think u can even get a 25 lb here. Most people get the over 30 lb shake look. Most people don’t really understand that it’s the underpayment that really protects the roof , especially tile roofs that are for looks and expensive to fix even if u have someone who is a pro on walking on them without breaking any:-) some still break! Gail
@Home Renovision DIY
Jeff, on the back side of the shingles I bought there is this thin plastic strip at one end. Do all shingles come with it. I am not seeing it on yours or at least I am not seeing you taking it off. Do I need to take it off before installing it?
Looks very nice
Looks good. 👌🏼 Thanks for the share, man.
Curious, why not use Ice and Dam instead of just roofing paper. And, no drip edge? I know your doing this on the cheap. But, having a roof fail on any application sucks. Speaking from experience. I did my first roof on the cheap. Lucky for me in was on a 14 x 10 shed and the tear off and repair was painful and expensive.
I live in MN and the climate is much like yours. I say spend a little more and have less to worry about in the future... and ice and dam paper lessens leaks if installed correctly. I would even put 2 roof vents on the back half not seen by the house. I am jealous of that nailer. Had to do mine by hand...
Still nice work and Thank You :)
Ice and water is probably not necessary because it’s unheated space. So ice dam won’t really be an issue.
Because it's a shed and the pitch is enough where you really don't need ice and water guard. I would've done a synthetic underlayment instead of tar paper but it works for his project.
Hand nailed will always be better than nail guns anyway, most "roofing companies" don't even set the pressure correctly and half the nails go through the shingle or hit a crack
@@timrxn5414 The sun melts snow daily.
Great video. This will help with my project. Thanks.
24 mins in, when you come to a gable edge and you end up being short up to 3 inches, you can do what's called a push, if you follow a 5 5/8s stagger, you can cut a 3rd of your shingles off and use the two pieces to push your course off the edge. Thus not leaving you with a small inch and a half trip has no wind strength and is more of a potential problem.
What??
Jeff, I'd like to convert my garage into a fam rm, but the cement floor is damp sometimes so how do it make this space usable please advise. rick
Q. Do the nail end come through into the shed? You used 1 1/4 nails but the roof sheets were 7/8th
Actually, the sheathing was 5/8" (at 1:37:14 in the 4 hour video). Of course they come through. All those sheds at Home Depot have hundreds of nails poking out the other side, inside the building. I used a sandwich of 7/16" sheathing on top, with a half inch foam in the middle and a 2.7 mm plywood face on the bottom. No nails show through.
Very surprised NOT to see the nails poking through in the next video (Permanent Temporary Power at 5:29). What gives??
Looks great! 👍🇨🇦
No drip edge under first row of shingles ? And all around the edges under the shingles first? Love your vids though.
For the typar and roll lining wouldn't water get in where the staples and nails are?
those shingles would just melt in Australia!! great video though.
I have these shingles ........and I am in Australia!, They work great on my shed........
Joist tape 1:16 I wonder if you will use ice & water protection (pretty sure if you do you won’t need joist tape)
could improvise a 2x4 crane with pulleys to hoist materials to roof not carrying on ladder
Beautiful !
Just FYI... The top of the shingles have tiny slits to bump the next row so you get an even spacing without measuring.
Are there really that many crickets?
What slope did you use for the roof?
I'm confused. No drip edge, ok but no starter strips? Sealed ridge, no soffit. just cut pieces. Just a shed but a soffit gives the protection, ventilation and would allow you add a simple rain chain.
The 3-tab shingles were his starter strip. That was the purpose of them.
@@tay13666 The 3-tab should be ripped in half so you get adhesive at the edge otherwise it can lift. Edges too, not just the bottom. You can buy strips if you don't want to make all the cuts.
Where’s Matty at?! Darn guy probably havin a nice cold one in a recliner. 😂
29.05 your rows look pretty good but your ridge cap might have benefitted from snapping a chalk line on front. Overall decent appearance. Shingles are clearly a budget brand but meeeh, it’s a shed
anything can be a hammer unless its a screwdriver. then its a chisel.
Can you post a material list on this shed build?
what if you redguard your sheathing
5 nails per shingle is a lot more robust than the 3 they used on my house 😂
too many nails more chance fore weakness 3 is good coastal areas seal them down
Thank you sir!
Traditionally you start from left to right. But , have seen it done right to left. Just saying; not finger pointing but I own my own Roofing and construction company. it works though. starter strips is now the way to start out with and a short piece to help offset the shingles.Sorry but I am picky - lol.Five nail is what we do here also. Felt paper is old school for sure. Synthetic is their new way - more expensive but really good.
left to right as in standing on the ground looking at the roof or standing on the roof and looking down at the ground? And also is there a specific reason for this? do the patterns come together better or something on specialty shingles?
I'm going to guess that most people are right-handed.
Old couch cushions! Take the foam pad out of an old couch. Our professional roof team uses cushions all day every day. They grip the roof, you can kneel or sit. Scoot them along without damaging the shingles.
speed comes from experience, and experience comes from practice. I've seen professionals who are fast but do a poor job, no shame in working at your own pace.
Agreed. Took me a summer (part time) to reroof my house. I’m slow but that roof isn’t going to leak and nail placement was always in the nail strip, correct position. Way better than the “professional” installation I was replacing.
I think you forgot your drip edge. Water will back under the sheeting and cause damage.
Thors stapler. Didn’t know that was a thing
What slope is this roof?
That small piece just ended up in the landfill.should have stuck it . On over layer. Reuse repurposed recycle ♻️ 😊
Why didn't you cut a bird perch on the end of the rafters?
no drip edge ?
Isn't that slope below the minimum for shingles?
Couldn't really see what you were talking about the top row of shingles based on the severe camera angle.
22:22 you should NOT nail within 6inches to the edge of the shingle, those are all potential leaks - anywhere two shingles have a butt joint, water WILL work its way into the crack and up under the shingles… if there’s a nail hole two close to that butt joint it can leak… if you absolutely have to put a nail there, use a tiny piece of ice and water barrier either under the nail or even over the nail to seal out water
Hey quick question. Have you ever used roof silicone paint? The brand "Marlin Coatings" specifically.
I have a roof, it's up in age, and it's leaking everywhere all the sudden. The shingles are still good enough and still flexible, but the roof leaks. To replace everything seems too much work for no good reason. The shingles are good, they are already there, but they leak through the nails that hold them in place.
My thoughts are to change the color of my roof from shingle black to silicone tan, and fix a butt load of problems in the process, starting with the leaks then ending with,,, well tan color I guess.
Point is question is, have you any experience with this silicone paint?
Cheers 🍻
Did a fine job for and OLD guy lol
Mark my word, if they won’t deliver the shingles on the roof, get someone younger to carry them up. My husband used to carry a square on his shoulders and he was only in his early 50’s when shoulders were replaced , knees, hips , so take it easy now. You won’t be this age forever!
I know this is a shed but on homes do u our metal under or over the valleys?
The poor brown fuzzy caterpillar fell off the edge of the roof at 28:05 trying to find a new home under the shingles...
" the ministry rules" lol
I don't understand not using drip edge. It's cheap and a normal accepted practise.
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I would rent an scissor lifter to get to the roof secure.
The sound of the bugs in the video and the sound of the bugs outside my window are going in-and-out of sync with each other and it's kind of freaking me out.
I’ve seen 5 foot 1, 115 lb Hispanic dudes carry three packs of shingles up on 1 shoulder - and this guy almost died with 1 lol 😂
Should have drip edge at eve first, felt goes over eve drip edge and under the rake pieces of drip edge. If the roof is a 3/12 or less must have ice and water on entire roof surface. Also shingles should not be installed in less then a 3/12 period.
As a woman I even noticed no drip edge that we always installed on our shed
Have any videos on how to do this?
Just look roofing videos
No one cares Jeff,it looks good.More importantly I’m sure it won’t leak.
😊😊
The pitch of the roof doesn't seem sufficient to use shingles. Perhaps a rubber membrane, metal, or torched roof would be better.
Why not a metal roof, wouldn't that have been better?
Seems easier just to use a metal roof🤔
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