NBN Online for the week of June 6, 2005

(Plain Text Version) for full graphical version, click here.

In This Issue:

Front Page
Builders Grapple With Sky-High Regulatory Costs
Will You Be the Next Winner of a Digital Camera?
Builders Reduce Environmental Regulatory Burdens
Layouts for Living
Floor Plans: Carolina Dreamin'
Coast to Coast
Market Driving Risky Mortgages
Housing Forum
Why Housing Costs So Much
Economics & Finance
California Home Equity Up $1 Trillion Since 2000
Eye on the Economy
Tips
A Story-Pole Approach to Shingling a Roof
Business Management
A Tune-Up Checklist to Help Reduce Cycle Time
Seniors Housing
Public-Purpose Marketing Should Aim for the Heart
Multifamily
Multifamily Market Continues to Gain Ground
Education
Education Calendar
Building Systems
Modular Builders File Petition on Load Regulations
Pulte Ramps Up Factory Component Building System
Regulation
San Diego Builders Cry Foul Over Road Fee
Legal
Trends in Land Use, Environmental Law Examined
Labor
Lowe’s Renews Commitment to Job Corps Grads
Building Products
Program Supports Builder-Owned Mortgage Companies
Builder's Engineer
How Scott Wammack Made It Big (Part 1)
TV
NAHB-Produced Shows on HGTV & DIY — This Week
Endowment
Grant to HBI Addresses Construction Labor Shortage
Association News
June Is National Homeownership Month
Tsunami Fund Receives Donation From Glenn Lukos Associates
Fund Brings Executive Officers to Board Meeting
Floridians Warned on Hurricane Preparations
Customize Your Computer’s Cursor With the NBN ‘Hammer’
GM Discount Available on More Than 80 Vehicles
Save More With BuilderBooks.com Rewards
Calendar of Events
NAHB Career Center

A Story-Pole Approach to Shingling a Roof

[Click for larger image]

Although roofing isn’t one of my favorite tasks, I do appreciate a straight, well-installed job.

But my eyes aren’t what they used to be. These days, I find it harder and harder to see pencil marks made on the dark tarpaper needed to set my alignment chalk lines.

So, to make it easier for me to see the marks for the chalk lines, I put them on drywall tape.

As shown in the illustration, I make marks on the drywall tape indicating the top edges of shingle courses.

  • I put them at 40-inch intervals for shingles with 5-inch exposure so that I can check the installation every eight courses. In the example shown, the 11-1⁄2-inch mark allows for the starter and first course of 12-inch wide shingles to extend 1⁄2 inch past the metal drip edge.

  • The subsequent marks on the tape refer to the exposure of the shingles plus the 12-inch width of the overlapping shingles. For example, the top of the second shingle course is 17 inches (5 inches + 12 inches) up from the bottom of the first shingle. For any given course above, the top of the shingle is 12 inches higher: 17 inches, 22 inches, 27 inches, 32 inches, 37 inches and so forth.

  • I unroll strips of tape on the ground and mark them there all at the same time. That step makes it easier to be accurate and lets me avoid the step of pulling a tape on a shingle to get a reference point. A fold at the end of each piece of tape hooks onto the metal drip edge.

  • I staple these tape strips atop the tarpaper at 12-foot to 15-foot intervals.

Then I snap chalk lines without having to hunt around for a hard-to-see pencil mark or snaking my tape down to the drip edge, hoping it won’t pull off as I get to the top of the roof.

― Bob Bulick

Tips & Techniques provided by Fine Homebuilding.
©2005 The Taunton Press

To request a reprint of this feature, e-mail Mary Lou von der Lancken at Fine Homebuilding.



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