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1950's ranch-on-a-slab in western NY. This is our first winter in the house.
There are ice dams front and back. We've been reading up, know about improving overall ventilation, etc. The most immediate situation is on our 3-sided room that sticks off the back of the house (faces west-ish). It's more of a porch-like 3 season room, made 4 season with the addition of a heating duct in the wall adjoining the original structure of the house. The roof/ceiling is not very thick on this room. The ceiling is a drop/acoustical tile ceiling, and when you push up the tiles, there are only a couple of inches before you touch the insulation, which I am assuming is up against the underside of the roof? It appears to be foil backed bat insulation (?). From where you enter the roof off the kitchen, the ceiling slopes from the standard 8 ft down to about 5.5ft at the furthest wall. Today was sunny and temps were up a bit, and I noticed seepage above and around the windows in this outermost wall. No gutters, no eave on this extension, and a very thick ice dam at the edge, probably 4-5 inches and extending up the roof a good 3ft or so. There were some impressive icicles hanging, which I chipped away quite handily with a rubber mallet and a cardboard box to protect the windows. Lots of runoff while I was out there. I did a bit of this chipping along one edge of the roof surface from a ladder, cleared maybe a couple square feet, but got tired fast (I had roof-raked already) and worried about all that pounding on the thin roof of this room. The overall roof is in good condition, we're 6 years in on a 30yr asphalt roof. Questions: Would some other kind of insulation a)be possible and b)improve the situation for the future of this room? Heating wise, we use/heat this room for approximately 12 hours a day and close it off after dinner with lovely plastic accordion doors and close the heat vent. Would the heating cables along the edge of the roof be a good solution for this small expanse, maybe 14 feet? There is an outdoor light, which I despise, mounted at a corner and would happily see it turned into an outlet for wires with a switch just inside on the wall. Read in the paper today about a metal roof snow slide? Anyone have a ballpark on what that might cost for this small area, and does it seem a reasonable idea in this situation? For the immediate moment, meaning tomorrow being the one day accountant/it's-tax-season mister will be home, we want to make some serious headway with the ice dam itself. I read about making the pantyhose filled with melt chemicals, and wonder can we just spread the chemicals out all along the ice dam and clear the whole thing off over the course of the afternoon, instead of just creating the drainage channels? The height is very low, so we'd be able to reach it all from the edge with the stepladder. Is there any reason not to spread the melt stuff around on the dam? Any other suggestions, besides the very helpful ideas of moving or demolishing the room, would be appreciated. Karen |
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