How To Tarp A Roof

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  • Опубликовано: 28 сен 2024
  • Welcome to Schoen Roofing!
    In this video we will be going over the steps involved and materials needed to tarp a roof.
    We get a lot of spring and fall wind storms in our area of Canada and this is a regular repair we have to perform.
    We have abandoned the traditional tarp method for one that uses synthetic underlayment as the main water deflector. It is much easier to deal with in the wind and less expensive.
    Please share this video with anyone who may be interested in seeing how a roof gets tarped after wind damage.
    Thank you,
    Chris

Комментарии • 41

  • @juancolon7990
    @juancolon7990 Год назад +22

    Quick word of advice for your future videos: keep the background music volume lower than your voice; your lesson & advice is more valuable than the music.

  • @mikehamm648
    @mikehamm648 5 месяцев назад +5

    State Farm says “no damage to see here”

  • @matthewbeckham9796
    @matthewbeckham9796 Год назад +1

    Thanks! This was great info.
    Was there any reason why you extended the strapping past the ridge? If not, no worries. It's just my OCD talking lol.

    • @schoenroofing
      @schoenroofing  Год назад +1

      Thanks for the comment! Not any reason for putting strapping past ridge.

    • @matthewbeckham9796
      @matthewbeckham9796 Год назад

      @@schoenroofing, sounds good! I figured, but wanted to ask anyway. Thanks again!

  • @juanluciano401
    @juanluciano401 Год назад +1

    May be the obvious, but my question is… was that underlayment used for roofing as opposed to the traditional tarp? And in fact will hold up alot longer?

    • @schoenroofing
      @schoenroofing  Год назад +2

      Thanks for the question! Yes this a roof underlayment and I believe holds up better than cheap tarps. You can get heavier duty tarps but they get very expensive.

    • @jimmi31580
      @jimmi31580 Год назад +1

      @@schoenroofing how long would think it will last? In a situation where have a remodel starting in spring and will do the whole roof then, want something that will last through winter

  • @carlosmendoza-er7ty
    @carlosmendoza-er7ty 8 месяцев назад

    you need to go on the field some more my friend there no overlap over the ridge you need to step it up some more buddy

    • @schoenroofing
      @schoenroofing  7 месяцев назад

      Why would I go on the field past the damage? If you watched the video you would see that the underlayment goes over the ridge. Thanks for the comment bud!

  • @carapungo
    @carapungo 2 месяца назад +1

    background music ruined this video.

  • @Average_Roofer
    @Average_Roofer 2 года назад +2

    But that’s not a tarp! 😏

  • @edwardb911
    @edwardb911 4 месяца назад

    As an adjuster that’s Not how you tarp.

  • @gmillwoodphotography
    @gmillwoodphotography Год назад +5

    You don't need to field nail like that for one. For a tarp that small, you don't need batten strips if you perimeter nail every 6"- 9". I've done massive tarps after hurricanes and never used strips and the very rare occasion that I field nail it'll be every 4 square feet. Two, you should use cap nails for tarping.

    • @schoenroofing
      @schoenroofing  Год назад +1

      Thank you for the comment. There are many ways to tarp roofs and I have done what you are saying in the past. In my experience, that can lead to the tarp starting to lift and flap with out the 1x3's. This is our preferred method.

  • @OHUQTU
    @OHUQTU Год назад +4

    video fail! - we are trying to listen to your talk, and your video has some very annoying music competing in your audio.

    • @schoenroofing
      @schoenroofing  Год назад

      Thanks for the comment. I would say the video is very good but I need to work on my audio mixing. Hope it helped!

  • @taheralbeitawi46
    @taheralbeitawi46 Месяц назад +1

    Good information. Background music is too loud.

    • @schoenroofing
      @schoenroofing  22 дня назад

      Sorry for that. I’m getting better.

  • @TuckerFerwerda
    @TuckerFerwerda 2 дня назад

    Music is really loud, not really necessary

  • @michaelt1349
    @michaelt1349 Год назад +2

    1.) What distance between screws would you recommend for the strapping and 2.) Could you have laid a piece of strapping horizontally on the other side of the ridge and used screws there as well?

    • @schoenroofing
      @schoenroofing  Год назад +1

      Hey There. I usually space screws 2 feet apart. Sometimes more, sometimes less, depending where I am. Yes I could have put a piece of strapping on the backside, prevailing winds are going up this roof so I didn't have a concern. Thanks for watching!

  • @Nonsheep1
    @Nonsheep1 29 дней назад

    Stopped watching due to music during you talking... why?

    • @schoenroofing
      @schoenroofing  22 дня назад

      Ahhhh it happens when you’re an amateur video editor. lol.

  • @UltimateMMAFan83
    @UltimateMMAFan83 10 месяцев назад +1

    Wouldn't moisture from sink down into the wood and then into the roof causing more damage

    • @schoenroofing
      @schoenroofing  10 месяцев назад +1

      Thanks for the question. This is a temporary water shield until the roof is approved for repair from insurance. I would never recommend leaving a tarp on long term or it will let water through eventually.

    • @UltimateMMAFan83
      @UltimateMMAFan83 10 месяцев назад

      Even short term, wouldn't this cause more damage (water going down into sink/nail holes

  • @FenceMedic
    @FenceMedic Год назад +1

    Nice work, curious what length nails and screws you recommend for a repair like this also, have you had good luck with the dewalt cordless ring nailer? thanks

    • @schoenroofing
      @schoenroofing  Год назад

      Hi. Thanks for the comment. We always use 3” screws. Our dewalt roofing nailer is in for repairs right now….. when it works it is a huge time saver but we are hoping Milwaukee will come out with one in the near future.

    • @FenceMedic
      @FenceMedic Год назад +1

      @@schoenroofing Thanks, how about the nails, 1.5 " ? or would you recommend 1.75"?

    • @schoenroofing
      @schoenroofing  Год назад +1

      @@FenceMedic 2” if you can get a 50 lb box. Will last a long time.

    • @FenceMedic
      @FenceMedic Год назад

      @@schoenroofing I thought that dewalt battery nailer would only accept up to 1.75 ?

  • @andrewbaxter5269
    @andrewbaxter5269 2 года назад +1

    Tarp and a handful of button caps would have been cheaper

    • @Hinru13
      @Hinru13 Год назад

      Until they rip and tear at rhe first bit of wind and rain. Learned the hard way living in South MS on the coast with all our storms and hurricanes.

    • @rickymcgrath2314
      @rickymcgrath2314 Год назад

      @@Hinru13 a quality synthetic underlayment with the correct plastic cap spacing is rated for 60-90 days or more of weather exposure for drying in.

  • @mikehamm648
    @mikehamm648 5 месяцев назад

    USAA says “our guidelines state that this is not damaged”.

  • @mikehamm648
    @mikehamm648 5 месяцев назад

    Allstate says “ our photos don’t show any damage “.

  • @blueberrycornbread
    @blueberrycornbread Год назад

    That was alotta nails

    • @schoenroofing
      @schoenroofing  7 месяцев назад

      We live in a high wind area so overkill is acceptable.

  • @drillbitist
    @drillbitist Год назад +1

    iko junk