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JRStern October 13th 09 11:32 PM

loose red spanish roof tiles
 
1930s house in Los Angeles with original super-heavy spanish tiles and
gobs of cement holding them in place - except where a couple have come
loose.

What's a good solution for fixing a couple of loose ones?

I hope it's something a layman can do without major effort.

Thanks.

Josh


hr(bob) [email protected] October 14th 09 04:23 AM

loose red spanish roof tiles
 
On Oct 13, 5:32*pm, JRStern wrote:
1930s house in Los Angeles with original super-heavy spanish tiles and
gobs of cement holding them in place - except where a couple have come
loose.

What's a good solution for fixing a couple of loose ones?

I hope it's something a layman can do without major effort.

Thanks.

Josh


Don't the tiles have a hole and a hook arrangement to hold them on?

Oren[_2_] October 14th 09 04:31 AM

loose red spanish roof tiles
 
On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 15:32:32 -0700, JRStern
wrote:

1930s house in Los Angeles with original super-heavy spanish tiles and
gobs of cement holding them in place - except where a couple have come
loose.

What's a good solution for fixing a couple of loose ones?

I hope it's something a layman can do without major effort.

Thanks.

Josh


Yes, I can expect these few tiles can be fixed in LA by a layman.


ransley October 14th 09 12:40 PM

loose red spanish roof tiles
 
On Oct 13, 5:32*pm, JRStern wrote:
1930s house in Los Angeles with original super-heavy spanish tiles and
gobs of cement holding them in place - except where a couple have come
loose.

What's a good solution for fixing a couple of loose ones?

I hope it's something a layman can do without major effort.

Thanks.

Josh


You dont need cement, so I will guess work was done in the past by a
hack. Ones ive worked on had nail holes and the tiles went on I
believe 1x2" wood.

dadiOH[_3_] October 14th 09 03:02 PM

loose red spanish roof tiles
 
JRStern wrote:
1930s house in Los Angeles with original super-heavy spanish tiles and
gobs of cement holding them in place - except where a couple have come
loose.



It isn't cement, it is mortar. The tiles aren't likely to go anywhere - as
you said, they are heavy - but you can lift the tile and add more/new
mortar.



--

dadiOH
____________________________

dadiOH's dandies v3.06...
....a help file of info about MP3s, recording from
LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that.
Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico




dadiOH[_3_] October 14th 09 03:07 PM

loose red spanish roof tiles
 
ransley wrote:
On Oct 13, 5:32 pm, JRStern wrote:
1930s house in Los Angeles with original super-heavy spanish tiles
and gobs of cement holding them in place - except where a couple
have come loose.

What's a good solution for fixing a couple of loose ones?

I hope it's something a layman can do without major effort.

Thanks.

Josh


You dont need cement, so I will guess work was done in the past by a
hack. Ones ive worked on had nail holes and the tiles went on I
believe 1x2" wood.


There are various ways to install Spanish style tiles. One way is what you
said.

Another way - better, IMO - is to nail the first course then mortar the
rest. Mortar holds them very nicely to 90# roofing that has been hot mopped
on. The result is a roof with no nail penetrations (and no 1x2s to rot)
that will last for decades.

--

dadiOH
____________________________

dadiOH's dandies v3.06...
....a help file of info about MP3s, recording from
LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that.
Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico




JRStern October 14th 09 06:18 PM

loose red spanish roof tiles
 
On Wed, 14 Oct 2009 10:02:15 -0400, "dadiOH"
wrote:

JRStern wrote:
1930s house in Los Angeles with original super-heavy spanish tiles and
gobs of cement holding them in place - except where a couple have come
loose.


It isn't cement, it is mortar. The tiles aren't likely to go anywhere - as
you said, they are heavy - but you can lift the tile and add more/new
mortar.


I guess some of the tiles are broken, where branches hit, or who knows
why. Just go to the home improvement megastore and look for generic
"mortar"? Sounds about right for my skill level.

Thanks.

J.



dadiOH[_3_] October 14th 09 08:08 PM

loose red spanish roof tiles
 
JRStern wrote:
On Wed, 14 Oct 2009 10:02:15 -0400, "dadiOH"
wrote:

JRStern wrote:
1930s house in Los Angeles with original super-heavy spanish tiles
and gobs of cement holding them in place - except where a couple
have come loose.


It isn't cement, it is mortar. The tiles aren't likely to go
anywhere - as you said, they are heavy - but you can lift the tile
and add more/new mortar.


I guess some of the tiles are broken, where branches hit, or who knows
why. Just go to the home improvement megastore and look for generic
"mortar"? Sounds about right for my skill level.



Type "S" mortar if they have it, whatever if not. Keyword is "mortar"...it
is used for sticking stuff to other stuff.



--

dadiOH
____________________________

dadiOH's dandies v3.06...
....a help file of info about MP3s, recording from
LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that.
Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico





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