Putting a roof inside a a patio, so the flashing needs to go on three walls. How would you cut the grove in the corners where the saw or in my case the angle grinder would not enter? I would have to go extra deep.
Hi Ricky. I’m not sure there is an easy way to continue the kerf all the way into your inside corners, unless, like you said, you go extra deep with your grinder. They do make a diamond carbide blade for the multitool or oscillating tool (whichever term you prefer) which will cut brick and mortar and get into 90 degree corners. I think what I would do is to transition the flashing at the point you can no longer cut the kerf to the desired depth (probably just a couple of inches short of the inside corner). At that point, I would snip the metal that is bent 90 degrees to go back into the kerf and bend the remaining distance down 180 degrees. Put butyl tape on this bent down portion, face- fasten this to the wall and apply silicon sealant along the top edge of the flashing and against the wall. For extra pressure against the wall, and therefore a better seal, you could put a rigid piece of metal between the screw(s) and the flashing metal. Hope this helps and your project goes well. Thanks for your question.
In the uk we install stepped cavity trays in above our flashing line as water can easily bridge a 1/2 inch flashing depth. Especially with porous bricks
@@KasselandIrons I've definitely tried a good number of searching using most associate terms to find anyone that sells anything like it. Please let me know if you have ideas on ways to procure anything like those (manufactures or product names). Most searches show either beauty care products or AV / low voltage clips... www.google.com/search?q=nail+clips&rlz=1C1CHBF_enUS805US807&oq=nail+clips+&aqs=chrome..69i57j0l7.3911j0j7&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8
@@stacktier8257 Ah, I can see why these would be hard to find via a Google search! We do sell these in packs of 100 for $9.41. If you would like to send me an email at ryan.bell@isaiahindustries.com with your name and location I will get you in touch with our appropriate customer support specialist for your area to get you what you need.
The flashings shown in the KasselWood installation training video series are all proprietary flashings we manufacture for use with our metal roof systems. If you’d be interested in seeing if this flashing will work for you, or possibly have us make something custom for you, please call us at 1-800-543-8938.
flat roof...you need a video for me to see. the truth is flat roofing you have to see it..or an easy fix would be henry elastomeric coating for a sealer..cheap easy diy..hind aluminum with no riber as a primer is important and the roomust be bone dry even in the crevices and 2 thin coats better than 1 thick one..and thin fiberglass flees helps in bad spots you dont know how to repair also low spots need to be filled in for a good repair..
The channel is designed to receive the metal shingles which have a formed thickness to them. The leg of the flashing that goes up the wall would then go behind the siding and the siding would be received into a channel that matches the siding, rather than the roof. On brick walls, the flashing would be bet and inserted into a kerf that has been saw cut into the masonry.
Finally, someone on idiot tube that knows how to flash to a wall/roof intersection correctly. You got it right - one out of thousands! PS I use an angle grinder for the stucco or brick cuts. Consider using lead sheet or zinc. Lasts forever and flexible for the install
Cutting INTO the bricks?!! Noooooo!!! I mean, it looks neat but that would be considered so wrong here in the UK. If you did that to any house with old, historic bricks it would be criminal.
You know you've done a nice job on whatever that is meant to be but chasing through the bricks is a no no here in the UK, we rake the joints out of the mortar and make a step flashing. Doing it this way you've just ruined the brickwork.
i dont know if we cut a thin chase into the bricks like this in australia but i like the nice straight line of the cut shown here in part because it would be way faster to fit a linear flashing than stepping it. we flash over the roof sheets not under the roof sheets like theyve done here!
Doesn't matter boys as longest the shit don't leak n u get paid. I've done it both ways it works . What I hate is when jerk slap 2 gallons of tar around the chimney to make it water proof lol
yes step flashings are nice work and finish up well but straight line cuts are better look looking then exterior bead slapped on to red brick stacks and rendered up bout 2 to 3 inches i see that alot in Ireland ...liking these abutment pieces tbh... clean proffessional finish.
yeah cut the bricks its a small price to pay clean lines fast effective efficient installation cheap no ice is likely to build up and or penetrate like your respect for your stone work but this is just a brick chimney friend
Putting a roof inside a a patio, so the flashing needs to go on three walls. How would you cut the grove in the corners where the saw or in my case the angle grinder would not enter? I would have to go extra deep.
Hi Ricky. I’m not sure there is an easy way to continue the kerf all the way into your inside corners, unless, like you said, you go extra deep with your grinder. They do make a diamond carbide blade for the multitool or oscillating tool (whichever term you prefer) which will cut brick and mortar and get into 90 degree corners.
I think what I would do is to transition the flashing at the point you can no longer cut the kerf to the desired depth (probably just a couple of inches short of the inside corner).
At that point, I would snip the metal that is bent 90 degrees to go back into the kerf and bend the remaining distance down 180 degrees. Put butyl tape on this bent down portion, face- fasten this to the wall and apply silicon sealant along the top edge of the flashing and against the wall.
For extra pressure against the wall, and therefore a better seal, you could put a rigid piece of metal between the screw(s) and the flashing metal.
Hope this helps and your project goes well. Thanks for your question.
You made that look easy. I've never seen flashing like that. So you shingle over the edge with the clips?
Thanks for the comment Al. Yes, the shingles will then overlap and cover the nail clips.
In the uk we install stepped cavity trays in above our flashing line as water can easily bridge a 1/2 inch flashing depth. Especially with porous bricks
Thanks for the details. What are those metal nail clips called?
Glad you enjoyed the video. Those nail clips are simply called nail clips.
@@KasselandIrons
I've definitely tried a good number of searching using most associate terms to find anyone that sells anything like it.
Please let me know if you have ideas on ways to procure anything like those (manufactures or product names).
Most searches show either beauty care products or AV / low voltage clips...
www.google.com/search?q=nail+clips&rlz=1C1CHBF_enUS805US807&oq=nail+clips+&aqs=chrome..69i57j0l7.3911j0j7&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8
@@stacktier8257 Ah, I can see why these would be hard to find via a Google search! We do sell these in packs of 100 for $9.41. If you would like to send me an email at ryan.bell@isaiahindustries.com with your name and location I will get you in touch with our appropriate customer support specialist for your area to get you what you need.
how does that apply to the peak?
I would like to see you working in a house with court 12 en 12 and two levels
Masonry blade for a skill saw???
The corner between the siding and brick is still open!
What is the name of the flashing youre using for vynal. I'm having a hard time finding it.?
The flashings shown in the KasselWood installation training video series are all proprietary flashings we manufacture for use with our metal roof systems. If you’d be interested in seeing if this flashing will work for you, or possibly have us make something custom for you, please call us at 1-800-543-8938.
He made a channel up the side of the Dormer supposed to use step flashing
Can you use flashing on a flat roof to the main house
flat roof pitched roof they only share a few of the same roofing flashings sidewalls usually are about the same
It's a flat roof in the middle that is leaking. And with the snow and Ice it's hard to tell where its coming from
flat roof...you need a video for me to see. the truth is flat roofing you have to see it..or an easy fix would be henry elastomeric coating for a sealer..cheap easy diy..hind aluminum with no riber as a primer is important and the roomust be bone dry even in the crevices and 2 thin coats better than 1 thick one..and thin fiberglass flees helps in bad spots you dont know how to repair also low spots need to be filled in for a good repair..
Why is the channel facing the roof shouldn't it be facing upwards for the siding to slide into
The channel is designed to receive the metal shingles which have a formed thickness to them. The leg of the flashing that goes up the wall would then go behind the siding and the siding would be received into a channel that matches the siding, rather than the roof. On brick walls, the flashing would be bet and inserted into a kerf that has been saw cut into the masonry.
Now that’s the way to do it. You want that water flowing fast and that water channel gets it done. Nice job my new way of getting this done.
Finally, someone on idiot tube that knows how to flash to a wall/roof intersection correctly. You got it right - one out of thousands! PS I use an angle grinder for the stucco or brick cuts. Consider using lead sheet or zinc. Lasts forever and flexible for the install
Cutting INTO the bricks?!! Noooooo!!! I mean, it looks neat but that would be considered so wrong here in the UK. If you did that to any house with old, historic bricks it would be criminal.
depends if the customer requests it
not here in Indiana it wouldn't be. many roofers do it. I've seen it done in a few States. however. I could understand if it is historical.
You know you've done a nice job on whatever that is meant to be but chasing through the bricks is a no no here in the UK, we rake the joints out of the mortar and make a step flashing. Doing it this way you've just ruined the brickwork.
i dont know if we cut a thin chase into the bricks like this in australia but i like the nice straight line of the cut shown here in part because it would be way faster to fit a linear flashing than stepping it. we flash over the roof sheets not under the roof sheets like theyve done here!
Doesn't matter boys as longest the shit don't leak n u get paid. I've done it both ways it works . What I hate is when jerk slap 2 gallons of tar around the chimney to make it water proof lol
yes step flashings are nice work and finish up well but straight line cuts are better look looking then exterior bead slapped on to red brick stacks and rendered up bout 2 to 3 inches i see that alot in Ireland ...liking these abutment pieces tbh... clean proffessional finish.
Good video with informative .
nice work, thanks for posting.
Great video!
yeah cut the bricks its a small price to pay clean lines fast effective efficient installation cheap no ice is likely to build up and or penetrate like your respect for your stone work but this is just a brick chimney friend
tim,yes .... never cut the brick....this way leaks all the time
bevel gauge
Most of the people I know that do roost don't know how to read LOL
Ecellent👍
House wrap under the underlayment that is ugly
Lazy. Step it just as the courses of brick are
LMFAO... terrible work... you very hear of step tins??? Lmfao....
Sorry,this guy needs a life...
Ever hear of
Flex Seal?
Inches? Lol glad we use metric.