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Dave January 30th 11 02:10 PM

Problem with connecting members between roof over deck and eaves of house
 
Family member's house is settling slightly while the deck in back is not,
and the galvanized steel L-shaped members that drop down from the roof of
her deck to connect beneath her eaves are not happy about the whole affair.
Need to replace said members with new ones that drop down slightly more than
those currently in place, but I have no idea what to even call these things
or where to look for them. If anyone understands what I am describing (or
trying to describe) please enlighten me as to what they are called and where
to look for replacements. Those currently in place are like an L on its
back, dropping down about ten inches to get below the eaves, and then
extending over about 14 inches to connect beneath said eaves. Looks like
1/4 inch thick galvanized steel, maybe two and an half inches wide.
Something like eight or ten of these critters, spanning twenty or
twenty-five feet. *Any* help would be greatly appreiated.

Thanks,

Dave



aemeijers January 30th 11 02:47 PM

Problem with connecting members between roof over deck and eavesof house
 
On 1/30/2011 9:10 AM, Dave wrote:
Family member's house is settling slightly while the deck in back is not,
and the galvanized steel L-shaped members that drop down from the roof of
her deck to connect beneath her eaves are not happy about the whole affair.
Need to replace said members with new ones that drop down slightly more than
those currently in place, but I have no idea what to even call these things
or where to look for them. If anyone understands what I am describing (or
trying to describe) please enlighten me as to what they are called and where
to look for replacements. Those currently in place are like an L on its
back, dropping down about ten inches to get below the eaves, and then
extending over about 14 inches to connect beneath said eaves. Looks like
1/4 inch thick galvanized steel, maybe two and an half inches wide.
Something like eight or ten of these critters, spanning twenty or
twenty-five feet. *Any* help would be greatly appreiated.

Thanks,

Dave



This being winter, more likely that the deck is moving UP- frost heave
can make slabs and pilings move all over the place. How old is house,
how old is deck, what climate are you in, etc. Need more info to make
even and educated guess. I would not recommend changing any components
until I was sure what was going on, and since deck and house move
relative to each other, I'd try to find a solution that allowed for
that. You describe deck as being metal, which makes me suspect one of
those sunroom thing, versus a metal-framed deck you can walk on. If it
isn't very old, I'd start with getting the company that put it in back
there.

--
aem sends...

mm January 30th 11 02:58 PM

Problem with connecting members between roof over deck and eaves of house
 
On Sun, 30 Jan 2011 08:10:00 -0600, "Dave" wrote:

Family member's house is settling slightly while the deck in back is not,
and the galvanized steel L-shaped members that drop down from the roof of
her deck to connect beneath her eaves are not happy about the whole affair.
Need to replace said members with new ones that drop down slightly more than
those currently in place, but I have no idea what to even call these things
or where to look for them. If anyone understands what I am describing (or
trying to describe) please enlighten me as to what they are called and where
to look for replacements. Those currently in place are like an L on its
back, dropping down about ten inches to get below the eaves, and then
extending over about 14 inches to connect beneath said eaves. Looks like
1/4 inch thick galvanized steel, maybe two and an half inches wide.
Something like eight or ten of these critters, spanning twenty or
twenty-five feet. *Any* help would be greatly appreiated.


I know absolutely nothing about this.

Should you disconnect the deck from the house before something breaks?
Weill the deck fall over, or caulked seams come apart, if it's not
conected to the house. Ruined caulked seams might not be as bad as
whatever breaks, unless it has broken as much as it can already.

Please remit appreciation to my post office box, via USPO, UPS, or
Fedex.

Thanks,

Dave



hr(bob) [email protected] January 30th 11 08:00 PM

Problem with connecting members between roof over deck and eavesof house
 
On Jan 30, 8:10*am, "Dave" wrote:
Family member's house is settling slightly while the deck in back is not,
and the galvanized steel L-shaped members that drop down from the roof of
her deck to connect beneath her eaves are not happy about the whole affair.



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