adding copper strip to ridge tiles to remove moss
I have a shallow pan tile roof with over one inch of moss on portions of
it. I recently discovered that the combination of moss and frost are destroying some of the tiles. I have tossed on a pile of "weed and feed" which seems to have been very effective at the killing the moss. But I want to add a copper strip along the ridge of the roof to make sure the moss does not come back. In the end I have decided to use a length of 8 mm small bore heating pipe which I will hammer flat. My question relates to the best way of attaching the copper strip to the ridge tiles. The options are to:- drill and screw to the ridge tiles drill and screw to the mortar between the ridge tiles some kind of glue something else I have not thought of I suspect that the first two would prove unreliable and destructive once moisture and frost get into the screw holes. Glue seems the only other option but I generally have little luck with gluing things. What sort of glue should I use. Also should I glue the copper directly to the tiles or should I use a series or say plastic straps to hold the copper in place (the straps would be glued). Thanks in adance.... Fergus |
adding copper strip to ridge tiles to remove moss
|
adding copper strip to ridge tiles to remove moss
"Fergus McMenemie" wrote in message
k... I have a shallow pan tile roof with over one inch of moss on portions of it. I recently discovered that the combination of moss and frost are destroying some of the tiles. I have tossed on a pile of "weed and feed" which seems to have been very effective at the killing the moss. But I want to add a copper strip along the ridge of the roof to make sure the moss does not come back. In the end I have decided to use a length of 8 mm small bore heating pipe which I will hammer flat. My question relates to the best way of attaching the copper strip to the ridge tiles. The options are to:- drill and screw to the ridge tiles drill and screw to the mortar between the ridge tiles some kind of glue something else I have not thought of I suspect that the first two would prove unreliable and destructive once moisture and frost get into the screw holes. Glue seems the only other option but I generally have little luck with gluing things. What sort of glue should I use. Also should I glue the copper directly to the tiles or should I use a series or say plastic straps to hold the copper in place (the straps would be glued). Thanks in adance.... Fergus Waste of time, been there done that, didn't even get the T-shirt as they say.... In my last house the non-sunny side of the roof suffer major moss problems, leading to blocked gutters and even other plants moving in eg grass. I placed a "run" of 2.5mm copper core from some old electrical flex across the uppermost tiles after reading somewhere about moss and lichen not liking copper. Possibly made a slight difference on the tiles the wire ran across but within a year or two moss was back across the whole of the roof. I ended up just sweeping the piles of moss off every couple of years. |
adding copper strip to ridge tiles to remove moss
Andrew Gabriel wrote:
In article , (Fergus McMenemie) writes: I have a shallow pan tile roof with over one inch of moss on portions of it. I recently discovered that the combination of moss and frost are destroying some of the tiles. Not sure how you concluded the moss would have been involved. I have tossed on a pile of "weed and feed" which seems to have been very effective at the killing the moss. But I Yes, that will be a one-off effect, but you will have nicely fertilised the tiles, which I imagine will promote the growth of all sorts of things. It'll be gone fairly sharpish. Eutrophicating the nearest water course... |
adding copper strip to ridge tiles to remove moss
Doki wrote:
Yes, that will be a one-off effect, but you will have nicely fertilised the tiles, which I imagine will promote the growth of all sorts of things. It'll be gone fairly sharpish. Eutrophicating the nearest water course... It will hopefull hit my grass lawn on the way:-) |
adding copper strip to ridge tiles to remove moss
Andrew Gabriel andrew@a17 wrote:
I have a shallow pan tile roof with over one inch of moss on portions of it. I recently discovered that the combination of moss and frost are destroying some of the tiles. Not sure how you concluded the moss would have been involved. Well a combination of frost and brids picking through the moss for bugs etc occasionally results in chunks of it |
adding copper strip to ridge tiles to remove moss
Andrew Gabriel andrew@a17 wrote:
In article , (Fergus McMenemie) writes: I have a shallow pan tile roof with over one inch of moss on portions of it. I recently discovered that the combination of moss and frost are destroying some of the tiles. Not sure how you concluded the moss would have been involved. A combination of frost and birds picking through the moss for bugs etc regularly results in chunks of it coming loose. The underside of the chunks lying on the ground are lined with little flakes of my roof tiles. I put two and two together... I have tossed on a pile of "weed and feed" which seems to have been very effective at the killing the moss. But I Yes, that will be a one-off effect, but you will have nicely fertilised the tiles, which I imagine will promote the growth of all sorts of things. Yes. I read that adding the copper will not clear a well established bed of moss. The weed and feed is to clear the ground. A pity you dont seem to be able to buy moss killer on its own. Just strip the cores out of some T&E. You don't need anything as large as a copper pipe. A length just stretched from end to end each side of the ridge will probably do (but probably far enough down not to be in contact with the ridge tile mortar which will corrode it). Sounds great. But how do I attach the copper and hold it in place. Have you done this? Do you simply rely on a good fastening at each end of the ridge and tension? The ridge is about 15m long. Regards! |
adding copper strip to ridge tiles to remove moss
In article ,
JohnW writes: JohnW, in article MPG.21ecd20e95ff1d9c989869 @news.aaisp.net.uk, says... You can - look for Ferrous Sulphate. Much cheaper... PS - but be very careful using this - it can result in a pretty permanent rust stain on concrete, etc. But when you have this applied, re-infestation seems much reduced. :-) I've a "rust" patch on the corner of a paved area that is still clear of moss, relative to the rest, after over a year. Products containing it also give dire warnings of making sure you don't walk it indoors onto carpets of get it on your cloths, where the stains will be permanent. -- Andrew Gabriel [email address is not usable -- followup in the newsgroup] |
adding copper strip to ridge tiles to remove moss
On Tue, 8 Jan 2008 10:11:25 -0000, JohnW
wrote after: You can - look for Ferrous Sulphate. Much cheaper... PS - but be very careful using this - it can result in a pretty permanent rust stain on concrete, etc. Would you be kind enough to let me know what proportion of dilution works best please? I got the ferrous sulphate but there were no instructions for using it diluted with water. e.g. level teaspoon or tablespoon with 1 pint of water (?) or whatever today's metric equivalent is. Thanks in advance, John. |
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