How to do a closed valley!!!
938,665
Published 2019-10-02
All Comments (21)
-
Gotta love the haters on here š Been doing valleys like this for 10 years and have never had an issue. Looks good. Keep it up š
-
I like when he makes a mistake, first we donāt notice until he admits to it, and second there is always a quick fix followed by a āthat wonāt leakā or a āitās not noticeableā āadd some tar, let that one go, inspector wonāt see itā Hahaa. Guy is a fantastic roofer
-
Minds boggled I'm out. No way I could keep track what nail pattern I did here or there. If I did this for a living there would be a lot of leaky roofs LMAO. Gonna stay a bug man.
-
Just donāt do it.
-
I went on my porch roof past two days to shingle. First time ever 1. Roofs ate hot real hot everything gets hot crapbwill burn your hands and knees 2. No idea how you just walk around I was scared as crap
-
I'm stunned, theirs actually a video that shows you how to actually start the valley and why the valley is started that way. Nice.
-
If it not done right it leaks, I was always taught to use metal I'm just old school cause I know it last along time an not leak...an it goes with the rest of the metal work....HAHAHHAHAHAHHEEHH āš»ššÆš§āāļø
-
What is your underlap?
-
Get closer boycup!! Zoom kid!
-
The starter shingle should be nailed low over the drip edge so the wind canāt blow it up. If youāre going to run a bleeder and point out of a valley you shouldnāt snap your line in the center of the valley you should snap it on the up slope so water doesnāt want to go underneath your bleeder. This looks like a about a 3/12 pitch to me and the underlayment should be 2 plied on the half lap. On a slope this low this valley should be woven. When you weave a valley there is no seem for the water to go underneath and you get 2 layers of shingles where a lot of the water runs. This guy has some more to learn about shingling. Take it from a guy who has been doing this nearly 40 years.
-
what nail gun is that
-
I started roofing like two years ago found u 6 months ago.Me and my twin bro have worked for a lot of roofing companies and found one I love but the foreman is sooooo prideful and hatful and runs evreyone off .me and my bro said I donāt care and finally shingled by ourselves a 16 square garage .FOR SOME REASON LOL DUDE ISNT HAPPY FOR US SND IS JUST A NASTY PERSONALITY WHILE WORKING.INSAID THAT TO SAY THAT ME AND MY BRO THINK U ARE SUCH A GREAT LEADER AND I BELEIVE MEN THAT ARE ABOVE OTHERS SHOULD SERVE AND TEACH OTHER MEN AND NOT HATE . HEY .HOW FINDING A BOSS LIKE YOURSELF IS SO RARE .YOUR METHODS ARE FOR SURE AND DEFF WORK .
-
Thanks for the video it is the last piece of the puzzle that I needed. We vets need to stick together.. thanks for your service!!
-
with all do respect, you need a mic
-
What about valley Tin?
-
Please if you're a new roofer don't do what this guy did. He is all over the place. There is no need for a weave at the bottom. There is no need for starters up the valley it's a lazy man's way and also the nail's don't go in the roof as much, caused from the extra bulk. It also sits up and leaves a bump visible from the ground. And God forbid you're putting on a second layer the nail's will barely hit the plywood .Also don't run all over the roof, take one row up at a time and place your shingles 4 feet away from the valley and in line with the valley for easy reach. Oh and have your house always above you much easier for manovering. Try some knee pads and a pouch as well. Like who does a toutorial with out equipment. Besides that great job :)
-
Excellent video, Veteran. Thank you for thoroughly explaining the process. It is amazing how precise you are while on the roof...not to mention dealing with the sun. Be safe and thanks bro.
-
Out on the west coast it used to be called a āCalifornia Weaveā and thats going back 30 years. They work great and last a long timeāEXCEPT if the homeowner is a pain in the ass and constantly goes on the roof.. Then you run valley metal and run a bead of 204 the whole length.. š¤ Nice!
-
No knee pads no pouch who are these guys
-
Oh man... you realize the manufacture will not warranty that valley right? I agree thereās nothing wrong with doing it this way. Looks great and saves A ton of time. If youāre just working on houses itās not a big deal. But unacceptable in commercial install. It will not pass and you would be tearing it out. Where Iām from we call this a California valley.