actually, you'd think they would be better as they are in the garage not getting weathered.They shouldn't be any worse than what's on the roof.
actually, you'd think they would be better as they are in the garage not getting weathered.They shouldn't be any worse than what's on the roof.
Exactly.actually, you'd think they would be better as they are in the garage not getting weathered.
Wow, sounds bad, hard call, seen it, knew a guy in roofing that I used to send jobs to, because I saw so much, if I could, I always mounted to the side of the house, with special wall plates worst case saw a C-Band fall into the roof, after a storm, not my job, just was told about it, and went over to see it, that made for a new roof, insurance blamed the installer, who was out of business alreadyHello, several days ago I noticed water seeping (not dripping) into the corner of my attic while it was raining.
The water is coming in directly under where Direct TV mounted their satellite dish 10 years ago. I ended my Direct TV service 2 years ago and had a handyman take down the dish but leave the footplate.
After it stopped raining, I got out my ladder and looked up on the roof where the dish is mounted. Much to my surprise, I noticed the footplate was screwed directly to the roof without any type of sealant or rubber water barrier.
Question: Would it be better to use a sealant over and around the footplate or remove the footplate and seal the holes under it?
Thanks in advance.
And where do you get matching shingles from say 10 years or more ago ?
Ceiling it with roof cement should work fine.
Also like Claude mentioned, check to see if the plywood below is rotting away while your up there.
As I mentioned, in a different way though.What’s worse a mis colored shingle or a shingle with black tar covering it, or a shoe from a satellite dish.
Either way it looks bad.
The other alternative is lifting the shingle and putting the tar under the shingle and let it ooze out the hole.
That's not an alternative. If you aren't replacing the shingle, to do it right you have to put sealant on the shingle and the hole in the sheathing.What’s worse a mis colored shingle or a shingle with black tar covering it, or a shoe from a satellite dish.
Either way it looks bad.
The other alternative is lifting the shingle and putting the tar under the shingle and let it ooze out the hole.
That's not an alternative. If you aren't replacing the shingle, to do it right you have to put sealant on the shingle and the hole in the sheathing.
If you don't have a shingle get a piece of flashing and glue it down to the sheathing with sealant.I’m just saying if you don’t have a shingle.
I’m well aware of the right way and wrong way?
Fwiw, Sunday here will be a high of 32* ... snow on Saturday.
All of the wood is likely rotten under the shingle.
Pull the mast or shoe using a 7/16 or 1/2 socket or wrench.
Get some wet stick roofing cement and spread it over the are with a trowel or paint scraper.
Most installations do not leak or cause issues.
The issue I’m seeing especially on dishes installed 10-18 years ago is the mast bolts start pulling away from the roof. Some of them so bad the dish actually tips over
If you have a shingle with a hole in it, it should be replaced.
Wow, sounds bad, hard call, seen it, knew a guy in roofing that I used to send jobs to, because I saw so much, if I could, I always mounted to the side of the house, with special wall plates worst case saw a C-Band fall into the roof, after a storm, not my job, just was told about it, and went over to see it, that made for a new roof, insurance blamed the installer, who was out of business already
I think that's a good way to handle it.Thanks Chip. I'm gonna have a professional roofer replace the shingles next spring. Hoping some Henry's 209 XR gets me through the winter without any more problems. Christmas has got me a bit strapped or I'd call a roofer tomorrow.
Starting a cold snap, we will probably go about 7 days without getting above 32*.Wow, pretty cold for a high. We average around 35-40 at night and 55-60 daytime in the winter which is okay. Pay for it in the summer though with 100 degree days and high humidity.