Thread: Roof angles
View Single Post
  #18   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
Harry K Harry K is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3,044
Default Roof angles

On Jul 14, 8:41 am, RicodJour wrote:
On Jul 14, 9:23 am, Harry K wrote:



The simple, fast, and very cheap, method is to use a friggin bevel
guage. It will let you lay out the exact angle in a few seconds and
there is no figuring or measuring (other than for length) involved.
You don't even need to know what the rise/run, or angle, is.


I am surprised at all the people who think you need to do all that
leveling, measureing, figuring. A bevel gauge should be one of the
added to a DIY kit at a very early stage.


Bevel gauges (aka sliding T-bevels) are useful, no doubt, but they're
not commonly the tool of choice for roof framing. A framing square
with stair gauges is the traditional layout tool.http://www.tpub.com/content/construc...s/14044_65.htm
And speed squares are a more recent development.http://www.amazon.com/Swanson-Tool-S.../dp/B000056C0D
Both have advantages over a bevel gauge.

R


Yes, for the _original work_. This guy is trying to match an existing
rafter. That is a job for a bevel gauge.

Of course a framing square (and knowledge of how to use one) should
also be a part of a DIY kit if anyone is going to be building a roof
or stairs.

Harry K