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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#1
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![]() Background: In the summer we had the back bedroom roof of our victorian terraced house reroofed. It has the original rafters but eveything else is new. It has slate/impermeablemebrane/air gap/ celotex/thinsulex/plasterboard . The problem: On clear nights, when the temperature drops fast, the roof starts to "crackle and pop". The sound come from all over the ceiling and is quite loud. It's as if someone is dropping small stones onto the roof from a great height. If you go out in the back garden you can hear it clearly and it seems to be coming from the slates. It does this for about 20 minutes and then it stops; last night it began at about 11 pm (in Cambridge). Another thing: when I went in the garden to listen, I noticed that I could hear a similar noise from another house that also had recently had the roof redone (by a different contractor). Is this a well-known problem? How do I cure it? We couldn't sleep in that room. In fact, it's so loud it wakes us up in the front bedroom! Robert |
#2
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MY whole roof replaced on a chapel conversion (slates, battens,
breather) on original joists, 18 months ago - yes, mine did that too for the first 6 months, less so now Nighttime after a very hot sunny day would do it too. AFAICT it's just settling, and does diminish after a few months. In fact with mine it was like a little wave of tinkling sounds running back and forth across the roof. If there was visible distortion of the roof, or loud cracks like an imminent failure of a timber, I'd worry. Otherwise, best not to focus on it - it will only seem louder and more intrusive because you do. I'm also getting creaks from the 6 velux windows I put in whilst having the roof done, or rather from the paneling around them. This seems to be because of differential thermal movement between the timber inside the insulation, and the joists outside. These aren't going away, so I think I'm going to have to change the way I've paneled in between the joists/velux on the outside and the studwork inside, so one side has a sliding joint. |
#3
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On Feb 15, 9:50*am, " wrote:
MY whole roof replaced on a chapel conversion (slates, battens, breather) on original joists, 18 months ago - yes, mine did that too for the first 6 months, less so now Nighttime after a very hot sunny day would do it too. AFAICT it's just settling, and does diminish after a few months. In fact with mine it was like a little wave of tinkling sounds running back and forth across the roof. I wonder if it's ice freezing the slates together but then cracking as further cold makes everything contract and move a little. I can't think that just shrinkage would make such pronounced "crack" sounds. Nothing structural seems to be moving. At first I was worried it was frost heave moving the walls about but it doesn't seem to be. The roof pitch is very shallow (16 degrees) and this might encourage water to get held between the slates I suppose. I do hope it stops after a while! The room is unusable for sleeping. Robert |
#4
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On Feb 15, 7:40*pm, RobertL wrote:
On Feb 15, 9:50*am, " wrote: MY whole roof replaced on a chapel conversion (slates, battens, breather) on original joists, 18 months ago - yes, mine did that too for the first 6 months, less so now Nighttime after a very hot sunny day would do it too. AFAICT it's just settling, and does diminish after a few months. In fact with mine it was like a little wave of tinkling sounds running back and forth across the roof. I wonder if it's ice freezing the slates together but then cracking as further cold makes everything contract and move a little. * I can't think that just shrinkage would make such pronounced "crack" sounds. Nothing structural seems to be moving. *At first I was worried it was frost heave moving the walls about but it doesn't seem to be. The roof pitch is very shallow (16 degrees) and this might encourage water to get held between the slates I suppose. I do hope it stops after a while! *The room is unusable for sleeping. Robert Are you sure there slates as slates dont go down to 18 degs. The recommended lowest pitch for slates is 22 1/2 degs. 24" x 12" with 4" head lap. On the other hand some single lap interlocking slates and tiles do go down to 17 1/2 degs. |
#5
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On Feb 15, 8:44*pm, Kipper at sea wrote:
On Feb 15, 7:40*pm, RobertL wrote: On Feb 15, 9:50*am, " wrote: MY whole roof replaced on a chapel conversion (slates, battens, breather) on original joists, 18 months ago - yes, mine did that too for the first 6 months, less so now Nighttime after a very hot sunny day would do it too. AFAICT it's just settling, and does diminish after a few months. In fact with mine it was like a little wave of tinkling sounds running back and forth across the roof. I wonder if it's ice freezing the slates together but then cracking as further cold makes everything contract and move a little. * I can't think that just shrinkage would make such pronounced "crack" sounds. Nothing structural seems to be moving. *At first I was worried it was frost heave moving the walls about but it doesn't seem to be. The roof pitch is very shallow (16 degrees) and this might encourage water to get held between the slates I suppose. I do hope it stops after a while! *The room is unusable for sleeping. Robert Are you sure there slates as slates dont go down to 18 degs. The recommended lowest pitch for slates is 22 1/2 degs. 24" x 12" *with 4" head lap. On the other hand some single lap interlocking slates and tiles do go down to 17 1/2 degs.- Hide quoted text - yes, i am sure they are plain slates. It was an existing roof (victorian back of house) with a very shallow pitch and BC allowed it with a completely impermeable membrane under the slates. there is a 50mm air gap under this membrane but I guess there can be wetness between it and the slates which could freeze. Robert |
#6
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Hi Robert,
We extended our house over a year ago, installing a new section of slate roof. We are experiencing the same "snap, crackle, pop" sound you described whenever the temperature drops at night. We now sleep in the old part of the house whenever it is cold. Did your roof settle down eventually or are we going to have to do something to fix the problem? Douglas |
#7
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#8
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I dunno but after getting new plastic guttering, there is snap crackle pop
from that on hot sunny days and as it coold s in the evening. I've never heard of slate doing it though. Brian -- From the Sofa of Brian Gaff Reply address is active "MM" wrote in message ... On Tue, 4 Mar 2014 13:23:02 -0800 (PST), wrote: Hi Robert, We extended our house over a year ago, installing a new section of slate roof. We are experiencing the same "snap, crackle, pop" sound you described whenever the temperature drops at night. We now sleep in the old part of the house whenever it is cold. Did your roof settle down eventually or are we going to have to do something to fix the problem? Douglas I should have thought it's all part of that olde worlde feel? |
#9
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On 05/03/14 09:02, Brian Gaff wrote:
I dunno but after getting new plastic guttering, there is snap crackle pop from that on hot sunny days and as it coold s in the evening. That can be cured with a little silicone grease on the joints (plumbers grease). |
#10
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In article ,
Tim Watts writes: On 05/03/14 09:02, Brian Gaff wrote: I dunno but after getting new plastic guttering, there is snap crackle pop from that on hot sunny days and as it coold s in the evening. That can be cured with a little silicone grease on the joints (plumbers grease). You can get plastic guttering with a white inside, which significantly reduces this. I've no idea what the make is, but it's what my brother's roofer used. Also came with protective film on the outside which you peel off after fitting, to preserve the high gloss finish. -- Andrew Gabriel [email address is not usable -- followup in the newsgroup] |
#11
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I'm sure it can, but that means getting a bloke or blokess in nowadays.
Brian -- From the Sofa of Brian Gaff Reply address is active "Tim Watts" wrote in message ... On 05/03/14 09:02, Brian Gaff wrote: I dunno but after getting new plastic guttering, there is snap crackle pop from that on hot sunny days and as it coold s in the evening. That can be cured with a little silicone grease on the joints (plumbers grease). |
#12
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On Tuesday, March 4, 2014 9:23:02 PM UTC, wrote:
Hi Robert, We extended our house over a year ago, installing a new section of slate roof. We are experiencing the same "snap, crackle, pop" sound you described whenever the temperature drops at night. We now sleep in the old part of the house whenever it is cold. Did your roof settle down eventually or are we going to have to do something to fix the problem? Douglas Yes it did settle and now makes no noise at all you will be relieved to hear. It took one hot summer to dry out the timbers in there. We now sleep in that room. I think it got very wet when they built it - they took many weeks to do it and it did rain directly onto the battens several times. I think that what happens is that the timbers freeze to each other and then the further contraction in the cold breaks the ice going "snap crackle pop". Now the water has all evaporated there is nothing to freeze. Robert |
#13
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On 05/03/2014 10:00, Andrew Gabriel wrote:
In article , Tim Watts writes: On 05/03/14 09:02, Brian Gaff wrote: I dunno but after getting new plastic guttering, there is snap crackle pop from that on hot sunny days and as it coold s in the evening. That can be cured with a little silicone grease on the joints (plumbers grease). You can get plastic guttering with a white inside, which significantly reduces this. I've no idea what the make is, but it's what my brother's roofer used. Also came with protective film on the outside which you peel off after fitting, to preserve the high gloss finish. My first thought was that this would lead to differential expansion on the inside and outside and hence warping. I assume this is not the case. |
#14
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On Monday, February 15, 2010 9:19:18 AM UTC, RobertL wrote:
Background: In the summer we had the back bedroom roof of our victorian terraced house reroofed. It has the original rafters but eveything else is new. It has slate/impermeablemebrane/air gap/ celotex/thinsulex/plasterboard . The problem: On clear nights, when the temperature drops fast, the roof starts to "crackle and pop". The sound come from all over the ceiling and is quite loud. It's as if someone is dropping small stones onto the roof from a great height. If you go out in the back garden you can hear it clearly and it seems to be coming from the slates. It does this for about 20 minutes and then it stops; last night it began at about 11 pm (in Cambridge). Another thing: when I went in the garden to listen, I noticed that I could hear a similar noise from another house that also had recently had the roof redone (by a different contractor). Is this a well-known problem? How do I cure it? We couldn't sleep in that room. In fact, it's so loud it wakes us up in the front bedroom! Robert I expect it's the fresh slates rubbing against each other as they contract in the cold. There must be thousands of little points of contact between them all. These will slowly wear down over time as slate is relatively soft, until it goes quiet. |
#15
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On Wednesday, March 5, 2014 3:28:42 PM UTC, Andrew May wrote:
On 05/03/2014 10:00, Andrew Gabriel wrote: You can get plastic guttering with a white inside, which significantly reduces this. I've no idea what the make is, but it's what my brother's roofer used. Also came with protective film on the outside which you peel off after fitting, to preserve the high gloss finish. My first thought was that this would lead to differential expansion on the inside and outside and hence warping. I assume this is not the case. It should reduce the temp differential. NT |
#16
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Den onsdag den 5. marts 2014 kl. 07.50.47 UTC+1 skrev MM:
On Tue, 4 Mar 2014 13:23:02 -0800 (PST), wrote: Hi Robert, We extended our house over a year ago, installing a new section of slate roof. We are experiencing the same "snap, crackle, pop" sound you described whenever the temperature drops at night. We now sleep in the old part of the house whenever it is cold. Did your roof settle down eventually or are we going to have to do something to fix the problem? Douglas I should have thought it's all part of that olde worlde feel? Hi Douglas, We have a new house with a slate roof and we have observed exactly the same noise from the roof as you describe when temperature drops below 0 deg. C and the humidity is high. The noise last for 20-30 minutes. I know it is long time ago, since you describe your problem, however, I just wondered whether you ever found an explanation to your problem and if it stille exists ? It has not been possible to finde anyone that could give me an explanation.. Kind Regards, Majbritt, Denmark |
#18
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On Saturday, 7 April 2018 10:32:10 UTC+1, wrote:
Den onsdag den 5. marts 2014 kl. 07.50.47 UTC+1 skrev MM: On Tue, 4 Mar 2014 13:23:02 -0800 (PST), wrote: Hi Robert, We extended our house over a year ago, installing a new section of slate roof. We are experiencing the same "snap, crackle, pop" sound you described whenever the temperature drops at night. We now sleep in the old part of the house whenever it is cold. Did your roof settle down eventually or are we going to have to do something to fix the problem? Douglas I should have thought it's all part of that olde worlde feel? Hi Douglas, We have a new house with a slate roof and we have observed exactly the same noise from the roof as you describe when temperature drops below 0 deg. C and the humidity is high. The noise last for 20-30 minutes. I know it is long time ago, since you describe your problem, however, I just wondered whether you ever found an explanation to your problem and if it stille exists ? It has not been possible to finde anyone that could give me an explanation. Kind Regards, Majbritt, Denmark The thread you're replying to explained it. It's he https://groups.google.com/forum/#!to...-y/86aHp0Z7y1U NT |
#19
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On 07/04/2018 12:27, Brian Gaff wrote:
Houses have always made noises from my point of view its merely the expansion and contraction of dis similar materials. Gutters are very prone to it if plastic and when they start to warm up in the sun, likewise recently installed roofs do it as there is no build up of detritus that softens the slight slidings that otherwise occur in jerks. When we had to have a few wooden items renewed due to rot near the eaves they clicked and groaned for about a year then seemed to settle down. Brian My neighbours UPVC gutter and barge boards make a racket when the sun comes out suddenly, and they expand. Sort of crackling noise. One of my joists makes a sudden 'boing' in the winter when the house has cooled down and the heating makes it expand again. |
#20
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On 07/04/2018 12:27, wrote:
On Saturday, 7 April 2018 10:32:10 UTC+1, wrote: Den onsdag den 5. marts 2014 kl. 07.50.47 UTC+1 skrev MM: On Tue, 4 Mar 2014 13:23:02 -0800 (PST), wrote: Hi Robert, We extended our house over a year ago, installing a new section of slate roof. We are experiencing the same "snap, crackle, pop" sound you described whenever the temperature drops at night. We now sleep in the old part of the house whenever it is cold. Did your roof settle down eventually or are we going to have to do something to fix the problem? Douglas I should have thought it's all part of that olde worlde feel? Hi Douglas, We have a new house with a slate roof and we have observed exactly the same noise from the roof as you describe when temperature drops below 0 deg. C and the humidity is high. The noise last for 20-30 minutes. I know it is long time ago, since you describe your problem, however, I just wondered whether you ever found an explanation to your problem and if it stille exists ? It has not been possible to finde anyone that could give me an explanation. Kind Regards, Majbritt, Denmark The thread you're replying to explained it. It's he https://groups.google.com/forum/#!to...-y/86aHp0Z7y1U NT Could it be something to do with the fact that modern slates are fakes, not slate at all but a grey composite? -- Dave W |
#21
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Den lørdag den 7. april 2018 kl. 13.27.43 UTC+2 skrev :
On Saturday, 7 April 2018 10:32:10 UTC+1, wrote: Den onsdag den 5. marts 2014 kl. 07.50.47 UTC+1 skrev MM: On Tue, 4 Mar 2014 13:23:02 -0800 (PST), wrote: Hi Robert, We extended our house over a year ago, installing a new section of slate roof. We are experiencing the same "snap, crackle, pop" sound you described whenever the temperature drops at night. We now sleep in the old part of the house whenever it is cold. Did your roof settle down eventually or are we going to have to do something to fix the problem? Douglas I should have thought it's all part of that olde worlde feel? Hi Douglas, We have a new house with a slate roof and we have observed exactly the same noise from the roof as you describe when temperature drops below 0 deg.. C and the humidity is high. The noise last for 20-30 minutes. I know it is long time ago, since you describe your problem, however, I just wondered whether you ever found an explanation to your problem and if it stille exists ? It has not been possible to finde anyone that could give me an explanation. Kind Regards, Majbritt, Denmark The thread you're replying to explained it. It's he https://groups.google.com/forum/#!to...-y/86aHp0Z7y1U NT Hi I can't get det link to work, so unfortunately I can't see the explanation. Majbritt |
#22
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On Monday, 9 April 2018 12:01:33 UTC+1, wrote:
Den lørdag den 7. april 2018 kl. 13.27.43 UTC+2 skrev tabby On Saturday, 7 April 2018 10:32:10 UTC+1, wrote: Den onsdag den 5. marts 2014 kl. 07.50.47 UTC+1 skrev MM: On Tue, 4 Mar 2014 13:23:02 -0800 (PST), wrote: Hi Robert, We extended our house over a year ago, installing a new section of slate roof. We are experiencing the same "snap, crackle, pop" sound you described whenever the temperature drops at night. We now sleep in the old part of the house whenever it is cold. Did your roof settle down eventually or are we going to have to do something to fix the problem? Douglas I should have thought it's all part of that olde worlde feel? Hi Douglas, We have a new house with a slate roof and we have observed exactly the same noise from the roof as you describe when temperature drops below 0 deg. C and the humidity is high. The noise last for 20-30 minutes. I know it is long time ago, since you describe your problem, however, I just wondered whether you ever found an explanation to your problem and if it stille exists ? It has not been possible to finde anyone that could give me an explanation. Kind Regards, Majbritt, Denmark The thread you're replying to explained it. It's he https://groups.google.com/forum/#!to...-y/86aHp0Z7y1U NT Hi I can't get det link to work, so unfortunately I can't see the explanation. |
#23
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Den mandag den 9. april 2018 kl. 15.00.16 UTC+2 skrev :
On Monday, 9 April 2018 12:01:33 UTC+1, wrote: Den lørdag den 7. april 2018 kl. 13.27.43 UTC+2 skrev tabby On Saturday, 7 April 2018 10:32:10 UTC+1, wrote: Den onsdag den 5. marts 2014 kl. 07.50.47 UTC+1 skrev MM: On Tue, 4 Mar 2014 13:23:02 -0800 (PST), wrote: Hi Robert, We extended our house over a year ago, installing a new section of slate roof. We are experiencing the same "snap, crackle, pop" sound you described whenever the temperature drops at night. We now sleep in the old part of the house whenever it is cold. Did your roof settle down eventually or are we going to have to do something to fix the problem? Douglas I should have thought it's all part of that olde worlde feel? Hi Douglas, We have a new house with a slate roof and we have observed exactly the same noise from the roof as you describe when temperature drops below 0 deg. C and the humidity is high. The noise last for 20-30 minutes. I know it is long time ago, since you describe your problem, however, I just wondered whether you ever found an explanation to your problem and if it stille exists ? It has not been possible to finde anyone that could give me an explanation. Kind Regards, Majbritt, Denmark The thread you're replying to explained it. It's he https://groups.google.com/forum/#!to...-y/86aHp0Z7y1U NT Hi I can't get det link to work, so unfortunately I can't see the explanation. Majbritt Odd, I've just checked it and it works NT Hi again, Now it works, however, I can see any clear explanation in the thread. Majbritt |
#24
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On 09/04/18 14:00, wrote:
On Monday, 9 April 2018 12:01:33 UTC+1, wrote: Den lørdag den 7. april 2018 kl. 13.27.43 UTC+2 skrev tabby On Saturday, 7 April 2018 10:32:10 UTC+1, wrote: Den onsdag den 5. marts 2014 kl. 07.50.47 UTC+1 skrev MM: On Tue, 4 Mar 2014 13:23:02 -0800 (PST), wrote: Hi Robert, We extended our house over a year ago, installing a new section of slate roof. We are experiencing the same "snap, crackle, pop" sound you described whenever the temperature drops at night. We now sleep in the old part of the house whenever it is cold. Did your roof settle down eventually or are we going to have to do something to fix the problem? Douglas I should have thought it's all part of that olde worlde feel? Hi Douglas, We have a new house with a slate roof and we have observed exactly the same noise from the roof as you describe when temperature drops below 0 deg. C and the humidity is high. The noise last for 20-30 minutes. I know it is long time ago, since you describe your problem, however, I just wondered whether you ever found an explanation to your problem and if it stille exists ? It has not been possible to finde anyone that could give me an explanation. Kind Regards, Majbritt, Denmark The thread you're replying to explained it. It's he https://groups.google.com/forum/#!to...-y/86aHp0Z7y1U NT Hi I can't get det link to work, so unfortunately I can't see the explanation. Majbritt Odd, I've just checked it and it works NT Works for me too. Homeowners hubbers are too stupid to use the Interweb or do DIY -- To ban Christmas, simply give turkeys the vote. |
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