Re-felting a shed roof question
Discussion
FamilyGuy said:
Mr GrimNasty said:
EPDM (rubber pond liner is a cheaper way to do the same thing).
Thanks for the tip! I've a shed to sort out too. Any tips on where to buy it?Edited by Mr GrimNasty on Monday 11th October 09:51
Laurel Green said:
FamilyGuy said:
Mr GrimNasty said:
EPDM (rubber pond liner is a cheaper way to do the same thing).
Thanks for the tip! I've a shed to sort out too. Any tips on where to buy it?Edited by Mr GrimNasty on Monday 11th October 09:51
Did mine this weekend- The plan was to spend an hour just redoing the apex, but the whole roof felt had split and covering up the bad bits would have taken too long - so it was stripped back, tacks removed and the felt put back on with plenty of overlap and a whole piece on the apex.
3 hours later, I finished.
In the dark.
During:

After:

I may* paint it soon
3 hours later, I finished.
In the dark.
During:

After:

I may* paint it soon
* I probably won't, in all honesty....
Normal shed roofing felt from B&Q or similar, get some large roofing tacks and Bob's your uncle. Get a good grade of roofing felt and it will be far better than the thin stuff that probably came with the shed. Remove all existing felt and tacks, make good any woodwork and refelt from lowetst part of roof upwards.
Very easy and very satisfying job. i've done a couple.
pp
Very easy and very satisfying job. i've done a couple.
pp
Thanks for the replies guys.
As for letting it dry, not sure that will be neccessary, water is not ingressing at the moment, just looks like it might do soon (shed is over 8 years old, so not bad considering).
As for the tiles, nice idea but roof isn't visible from the house and has a low pitch anyway.
So, decent felt sounds like the answer - just need to pick a sunny day/weekend.
As for letting it dry, not sure that will be neccessary, water is not ingressing at the moment, just looks like it might do soon (shed is over 8 years old, so not bad considering).
As for the tiles, nice idea but roof isn't visible from the house and has a low pitch anyway.
So, decent felt sounds like the answer - just need to pick a sunny day/weekend.
Sheds - right.
OT but shed related.
I've got a gap between the side of the house and the fence that will squeeze in a 7' x 5' shed.
Question is; how heavy is such a shed if I build it in the garden then shimmy it into place maybe on rollers?
There wouldn't be any room to get to the outside if I tried to erect (ooo err etc) it in place.
OT but shed related.
I've got a gap between the side of the house and the fence that will squeeze in a 7' x 5' shed.
Question is; how heavy is such a shed if I build it in the garden then shimmy it into place maybe on rollers?
There wouldn't be any room to get to the outside if I tried to erect (ooo err etc) it in place.
kriggi said:
Richard - Why not build the shed by bolting the sides and roof together but not to the base and felt it. The get a mate to go inside the shed with you lift it up off the base, move base to required position then back inside the shed and walk it onto shed base and screw down!
Excellent.For some reason I've got the theme tune for Dad's Army running through my head at the thought of 2 blokes inside a shed trying to blindly walk it down the side of the house.
There are so many way that could go wrong.
Gotta give it a go.
rfisher said:
kriggi said:
Richard - Why not build the shed by bolting the sides and roof together but not to the base and felt it. The get a mate to go inside the shed with you lift it up off the base, move base to required position then back inside the shed and walk it onto shed base and screw down!
Excellent.For some reason I've got the theme tune for Dad's Army running through my head at the thought of 2 blokes inside a shed trying to blindly walk it down the side of the house.
There are so many way that could go wrong.
Gotta give it a go.
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