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Default Shading a Roof--with a roof?

We are presently restoring a 1,250 sq. ft. log home built in the early '70s,
sited on a spot without a leaf of shade over the roof. The pitch of the
original roof (built of trusses) is approximately 1:4 which strikes us as
being pretty low even for the southern Missouri Ozarks where there is now
and again a fair amount of snow come winter, and the avg. yearly precip. is
43.6 inches.

The structure was built of oak logs from 6 to 10 inches in diameter and
raised in three stages--leaving a central, original structure of 28 x 22
with later log additions either side 25 x 14. Standing in front of the
place you're looking at an overall log-built broadside of 50 feet with north
& south additions indented by three feet at the front, but forming an even
exterior at the back. The roofs over the north and south additions are
approx. one foot lower than that of the original central building.

We want to frame one roof (at an increased pitch) over the entire building,
leaving the original roofing in place. We would superimpose new ridge beams
and rafters from either side of the stone masonry chimney to both gable ends
about two feet higher than what's there now, to leave at the peak that much
ventilated air-space covered by Ondura corrugated asphalt impregnated
fiberglass--with no plywood sheathing, but a framework of planks over
rafters (16" on center) spaced about 8 inches--wider if feasible.

This would be ventilated from both gable ends and at the soffits, and
further so by fans installed at gable vents.

In short, we want to build a condition of shade over the original roof. Can
this be done, or are we just dreaming like the pair of amateurs we are? If
otherwise it seems a sensible plan, we'd want to remove those three layers
of baked, crumbling shingles from the original roof surface and put down
some form of rigid insulating material, such as the commonly available
foil-faced sheathing or whatever would stand up to the heat--there would be
at least 6 inches of ventilated air space at the new soffits between the
corrugated roofing and the insulation sheathed original roof.

Can this work?
--
Mackie



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Default Shading a Roof--with a roof?

Sounds like a good plan. It would keep the original attic cooler in the
summer and provide a cold roof for the winter - no ice dams, if they were a
problem in the past.

"Mac the Nice" wrote in message
...
We are presently restoring a 1,250 sq. ft. log home built in the early
'70s, sited on a spot without a leaf of shade over the roof. The pitch of
the original roof (built of trusses) is approximately 1:4 which strikes us
as being pretty low even for the southern Missouri Ozarks where there is
now and again a fair amount of snow come winter, and the avg. yearly
precip. is 43.6 inches.

The structure was built of oak logs from 6 to 10 inches in diameter and
raised in three stages--leaving a central, original structure of 28 x 22
with later log additions either side 25 x 14. Standing in front of the
place you're looking at an overall log-built broadside of 50 feet with
north & south additions indented by three feet at the front, but forming
an even exterior at the back. The roofs over the north and south additions
are approx. one foot lower than that of the original central building.

We want to frame one roof (at an increased pitch) over the entire
building, leaving the original roofing in place. We would superimpose new
ridge beams and rafters from either side of the stone masonry chimney to
both gable ends about two feet higher than what's there now, to leave at
the peak that much ventilated air-space covered by Ondura corrugated
asphalt impregnated fiberglass--with no plywood sheathing, but a framework
of planks over rafters (16" on center) spaced about 8 inches--wider if
feasible.

This would be ventilated from both gable ends and at the soffits, and
further so by fans installed at gable vents.

In short, we want to build a condition of shade over the original roof.
Can this be done, or are we just dreaming like the pair of amateurs we
are? If otherwise it seems a sensible plan, we'd want to remove those
three layers of baked, crumbling shingles from the original roof surface
and put down some form of rigid insulating material, such as the commonly
available foil-faced sheathing or whatever would stand up to the
heat--there would be at least 6 inches of ventilated air space at the new
soffits between the corrugated roofing and the insulation sheathed
original roof.

Can this work?
--
Mackie



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Default Shading a Roof--with a roof?


"TH" wrote in message
ink.net...
Sounds like a good plan.


Glad to hear it.

It would keep the original attic cooler in the summer and provide a cold
roof for the winter - no ice dams, if they were a problem in the past.


Maybe you heard about that ice storm of last year--worst in anyone's memory
for the area? All the firewood needed for years to come is now right at
everybody's doorstep. Driving through it this spring while the trees were
yet bare, one word kept coming to mind: Tunguska!

As to the attic, yes, that's the main idea--but you should see it as it is
now, all crowded up with those 24 foot trusses spaced at 16" on center,
about which I neglected to mention the really hairy part and the reason we
got the place so cheap, why *zero value* was being assessed to the house,
which according to the realtor was "built too low"--with that drywall
ceiling only 6' 6" above the floor. Little wonder the bank that repossessed
the place saw land value alone at their price of $39,000. So, when they
finally caved to our bid of $31k, not only did we get a free log home
(worthy of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs) with that 20 wooded acres, but
the electric installation, the well and working submersible pump, even the
septic system to boot.

Obviously, except some caterpillar from Alice in Wonderland should happen
along to offer us a bite of something magic to raise that ceiling over our
heads, something else has to be done about those trusses, especially as it
comes to the project of providing the semi-cathedral style ceiling we want
for the place. The rafter (top chord) span is 16 feet from plate-log to
peak. They are 2x4's. Our plan (or should I say "our hope") is that we can
raise the horizontal bottom chord with its triangular webbing up to the 9'
level, three feet below the peak--without having to break up the living
space with unwanted bearing walls to keep those trusses firmly in place.

Obviously, some form of support must be had to stop those unsupported rafter
legs of the trusses from sagging, so I figure to raise two stout purlins
(paired or trebled 2x8's) to run parallel with the plates that formerly bore
support for the trusses, these would now bear that load, as bolted to 6x6
upright beams--just two per purlin, equally spaced as raised from piers
under the house up to that nine foot level.

I did this once upon a time back in the 60's for a house full of mushroom
munching dwarfs (aka "hippies") along the Avenue of Giants in the Northern
California redwood country, north of Mendocino and it seemed to work pretty
good. It was my proudest achievement of those years, as a 'hippie', that one
8 by 8 beam I installed in that house, from a hole in the ground beneath the
floor and up to the sky, to the second story they wanted to add. Initially,
I'd wanted nothing to do with the project, till I was out-voted and the
State of California came by to say there'd be no permit without that beam
should go into the ground right beside my bed.

Beside *my* bed? Yup. So said the Law. Well, all right then. Since it was
beside my bed that the law said a log had to go, I made it my project to see
to it that it should go up straight and true, so the roof should not come
down over me and my old lady's head--and I did it right, smoking nothing
more aromatic than tobacco while I was at it, mixing the cement and framing
the braces. I believe that beam still stands in the middle of the redwood
forest there in the middle of that hacienda as a monument to a moment of
sobriety in the midst of a year long orgy of nothing of the sort.
--
Mackie http://members.virtualtourist.com/m/520b8/



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Default Shading a Roof--with a roof?

On Jul 17, 10:51 am, "Mac the Nice"
wrote:
We are presently restoring a 1,250 sq. ft. log home built in the early '70s,
sited on a spot without a leaf of shade over the roof. The pitch of the
original roof (built of trusses) is approximately 1:4 which strikes us as
being pretty low even for the southern Missouri Ozarks where there is now
and again a fair amount of snow come winter, and the avg. yearly precip. is
43.6 inches.

The structure was built of oak logs from 6 to 10 inches in diameter and
raised in three stages--leaving a central, original structure of 28 x 22
with later log additions either side 25 x 14. Standing in front of the
place you're looking at an overall log-built broadside of 50 feet with north
& south additions indented by three feet at the front, but forming an even
exterior at the back. The roofs over the north and south additions are
approx. one foot lower than that of the original central building.

We want to frame one roof (at an increased pitch) over the entire building,
leaving the original roofing in place. We would superimpose new ridge beams
and rafters from either side of the stone masonry chimney to both gable ends
about two feet higher than what's there now, to leave at the peak that much
ventilated air-space covered by Ondura corrugated asphalt impregnated
fiberglass--with no plywood sheathing, but a framework of planks over
rafters (16" on center) spaced about 8 inches--wider if feasible.

This would be ventilated from both gable ends and at the soffits, and
further so by fans installed at gable vents.

In short, we want to build a condition of shade over the original roof. Can
this be done, or are we just dreaming like the pair of amateurs we are? If
otherwise it seems a sensible plan, we'd want to remove those three layers
of baked, crumbling shingles from the original roof surface and put down
some form of rigid insulating material, such as the commonly available
foil-faced sheathing or whatever would stand up to the heat--there would be
at least 6 inches of ventilated air space at the new soffits between the
corrugated roofing and the insulation sheathed original roof.

Can this work?
--
Mackie

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Im sure there are free Gov conservatoty groups and codes you can
review, wiith that amount of rain I think the oriinal roof will rott
in a few years. I think its a mistake big time. Your best bet is the
local city inspector as your home could be deemed and closed
as ..........UNLIVABLE..................

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Default Shading a Roof--with a roof?

"ransley" wrote in message
ups.com...
Im sure there are free Gov conservatoty groups and codes you can
review . . .


Speaking of doing a "review," there's an old boy who moonlights hereabout
doing one of those, where for his style of it he just stands out in front of
his barn any time an audience of two or three have gathered--and folks swear
you'll never hear or see anything funnier in this part of the county, let
alone the Ozarks at large, than the way old Orville over there at Possum
Trot Corners can take hold of the strap on his bib overalls, tip back his
hat and with a perfectly straight face, say, "codes!"

Omigod, it's killing me. Codes? Looks like Orville found himself some
competition in the funny-bone department.

wiith that amount of rain I think the oriinal roof will rott
in a few years. I think its a mistake big time. Your best bet is the
local city inspector as your home could be deemed and closed
as ..........UNLIVABLE..................


Holy pus-popping carbuncles for eye-holes! Look at that why don't you? He's
a killer that one, a real killer. He really ought to start up a "review".

But before some "city inspector" comes along and condemns this here
"ransley's" spellchecker as UNTENABLE due to mildew, mold and/or some
disgusting infection of gangrene--as to any such possibility of "rott"?
Heh. That's one thing experience of seeing an open soffit in application
teaches entirely and totally to the contrary: it is indeed, the whole idea
of the thing. Of course, you can buy the fancy pre-fab perforated soffit
panels to keep the squirrels, Gov inspectors and the ransleys out, or you
can the more wisely staple some hardware cloth up there, and pretty it up
with a squirt of paint. And that'll keep the varmints right where they
belong.

See this, ransley . . .

#############

That's what I've scrimped and saved and waited and searched 20 years to find
and get and put between me and your "rott" of codes and city inspectors for
so long as I shall live, as indeed there is no such GOD DAMNED thing
anywhere near us now as "codes" nor any "city" to impose them, not up in
this part of the hills. No city. No "inspector". No "ransleys". Nothing but
sun, sky, trees, pure air, pure water, singing birds, or in short, Life,
Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness.
:-)
--
Mackie
http://www.mackiemesser.zoomshare.com/0.html
http://vignettes-mackie.blogspot.com/



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Default Shading a Roof--with a roof?

On Jul 17, 12:51 pm, "Mac the Nice"
wrote:
We are presently restoring a 1,250 sq. ft. log home built in the early '70s,
sited on a spot without a leaf of shade over the roof. The pitch of the
original roof (built of trusses) is approximately 1:4 which strikes us as
being pretty low even for the southern Missouri Ozarks where there is now
and again a fair amount of snow come winter, and the avg. yearly precip. is
43.6 inches.

The structure was built of oak logs from 6 to 10 inches in diameter and
raised in three stages--leaving a central, original structure of 28 x 22
with later log additions either side 25 x 14. Standing in front of the
place you're looking at an overall log-built broadside of 50 feet with north
& south additions indented by three feet at the front, but forming an even
exterior at the back. The roofs over the north and south additions are
approx. one foot lower than that of the original central building.

We want to frame one roof (at an increased pitch) over the entire building,
leaving the original roofing in place. We would superimpose new ridge beams
and rafters from either side of the stone masonry chimney to both gable ends
about two feet higher than what's there now, to leave at the peak that much
ventilated air-space covered by Ondura corrugated asphalt impregnated
fiberglass--with no plywood sheathing, but a framework of planks over
rafters (16" on center) spaced about 8 inches--wider if feasible.

This would be ventilated from both gable ends and at the soffits, and
further so by fans installed at gable vents.

In short, we want to build a condition of shade over the original roof. Can
this be done, or are we just dreaming like the pair of amateurs we are? If
otherwise it seems a sensible plan, we'd want to remove those three layers
of baked, crumbling shingles from the original roof surface and put down
some form of rigid insulating material, such as the commonly available
foil-faced sheathing or whatever would stand up to the heat--there would be
at least 6 inches of ventilated air space at the new soffits between the
corrugated roofing and the insulation sheathed original roof.

Can this work?
--
Mackie

--

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Sure it can be done--it's just a matter of money. I suspect there is
more involved to your plan than you are thinking. Without knowing any
spans, it seems like a new ridge beam by itself will require new posts
and new footings. Also, what are you going to set the heels of the
rafters on? It all can be done, yes, but it ain't gonna be cheap.
Might want to look into scissor trusses too.

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Default Shading a Roof--with a roof?


"marson" wrote in message
oups.com...

Sure it can be done--it's just a matter of money. I suspect there is
more involved to your plan than you are thinking. Without knowing any
spans, it seems like a new ridge beam by itself will require new posts
and new footings. Also, what are you going to set the heels of the
rafters on? It all can be done, yes, but it ain't gonna be cheap.
Might want to look into scissor trusses too.


As mentioned in the other group, I'll get back with this tonight.

Thanks!
--
Mackie



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