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by: Mike Guertin
Topics include: waterproof shingle underlayment, racking pattern, control chalklines, vertical control lines, roof staging, primary control line, waterproof underlayment, vented drip edge, cap shingles, cutout slots, starting shingle, installing new shingles, extended drip edge, laminated shingles, trimming shingles, stabilized asphalt, most shingle manufacturers, rake edge flashing, jack staging, starter shingles, metric shingles, unvented roofs, final shingle, staging planks, asphalt roof cement
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Book Description -- Asphalt is the most common roofing material in North America. With 65 drawings and over 200 color photographs, this book is an in-depth guide to working with it -- whether the reader is a professional installing a brand-new roof or a do-it-yourselfer simply making necessary repairs.
Roofing with Asphalt Shingles
Mike Guertin
Expert advice from start to finish
More than 80% of the homes in North America are roofed with asphalt shingles. Whether you're shingling your own house or tackling roofs every day, Roofing with Asphalt Shingles will help you improve the production, appearance, and quality of your finished product from eaves to ridge. Installing an asphalt roof isn't the most difficult task you'll face, but improper installation can lead to costly interior damage. Avoid those worries with clear and complete instructions from author and custom builder Mike Guertin.
In Roofing with Asphalt Shingles you'll find details on:
. planning, estimating, and ordering materials
. calculating and installing adequate roof ventilation
. preparing a roof deck for shingles
. installing shingles quickly and accurately
. flashing critical roof-to-roof and roof-to-wall connections
. stripping and reshingling old roofs
About the author
Mike Guertin is a custom builder with more than 20 years of roofing experience. In addition to being a contributing editor to Fine Homebuilding magazine, he has written numerous articles on home building, is the co-author of Precision Framing (The Taunton Press, 2001), and conducts training clinics at trade shows throughout North America.
Roofing with Asphalt Shingles
Mike Guertin
Expert advice from start to finish
Introduction
1 Shingles and Other Materials
Anatomy of an Asphalt Shingle
Asphalt Shingle Products
Roof Material Warranties
Other Materials Needed to Install a Roof
2 Tools, Equipment, and Safety
Hand Tools
Pneumatic Equipment
Stripping and Repair Tools and Equipment
Tarps
Staging and Ladders
Safety Equipment
3 Material Planning and Ordering
Calculating the Shingle Quantity
Other Materials
Ordering Shingles
4 Roof Ventilation and Roof-Deck Preparation
Roof and Attic Ventilation
Calculating and Planning Ventilation
Unvented Roofs
Preparing Old Roofs
Evaluating and Repairing the Roof Deck
5 Preparing the Roof for Shingling
Staging the Roof Edge
Loading the Roof
Preparing the Roof Deck
Working with Waterproof Shingle Underlayment
6 Laying Out the Roof for Shingling
Shingle-Installation Patterns
Control-Line Layout
Special Layout Situations
Adjusting for Problem Roof Alignment
7 Installing Roof Shingles
Fasteners and Fastening
Installing Starter Strips
Getting Started Shingling
Shingling Up the Roof
Working from Roof Staging
Working from the Top Down
8 Tending to the Details
Trimming Shingles
Installing Basic Flashing
Flashing Chimneys
Flashing Skylights
Installing Roof Vents
Shingling Valleys
Installing Cap Shingles
Shingling Cones
9 Low-Pitch, Layover, and Roll Roofing
Shingling Low-Pitch Roofs
Installing a Layover Roof
Roll Roofing
Reviews:
Roofing with Asphalt Shingles
Mike Guertin
Expert advice from start to finish
About 80 percent of North American residential roofs are covered with asphalt roof shingles. These shingles have been around since the turn of the 20th century and owe their popularity to low cost, ease of installation, good performance, and adaptability to most roof designs.
When the homebuilding business in my area was slow in the early 1980s, my crew and I did a lot of roofing. Soon we were introduced to pneumatic roof staplers and our production doubled. From the start, we decided to be fussy about the appearance of our roof installations. The slots in three-tab shingles had to be straight, as well as the horizontal course lines. After all, it doesn't take much more time to do a nice job than it does to hack things up.
Layovers, strip-offs and reroofs, and new homes: We did (and still do) it all. We learned some of the details of a well-installed shingle job simply by reading the wrapper on a bundle of roof shingles. Every bundle has the installation instruction right there on it as well as warranty information. Most manufacturers' instructions are similar if not identical. From time to time, I read the instructions on a new bundle just to see if anything has changed.
The bundle wrapper is a good place to start, but of course it doesn't have the room for detailed information about all the situations you will encounter when shingling a roof and, just as important, when preparing a roof to be shingled. From installing drip edge to capping ridges, you'll find all the details you need in this book to install a roof that will fulfill its two important and distinct functions: To enhance the beauty of the home and to remain watertight for many years.
The individual skills you need to install a roof are among the easiest in the building trades to acquire, and you don't need a lot of specialized tools to get started. Creating a beautiful and waterproof roof does take diligence, however, and I have tried to instill that diligence throughout this book. Also, to be a good roofer you need to know more than just the right detail procedures. You need to understand how the roof works as a system. This is why, for example, you'll find a chapter devoted to ventilation.
As with any trade, it is quite possible to be a superb and diligent roofing mechanic and lose money on every job. To make a good living, you need to know how to size up a job and create a strategy for attacking it efficiently. It's not enough to know the procedures for how to do the racking pattern or the pyramid pattern or even shingle from the top down. The trick is to know when each approach is most efficient, and this book is designed to arm you with the knowledge to make those decisions. Of course if you are a do-it-yourselfer, your livelihood won't depend on an efficient plan, but having one will help ensure that roofing your own house or garage doesn't become a career.
My crew and I find it's pretty rare for people to compliment us on our roof jobs. I guess most people just don't give the roof much thought. Of course when water leaks into the house, no matter what the source, you know who they call first. But that's okay. When we step back for a final look before getting into our trucks, we know we're looking at a job we can be proud of.
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