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Default Repairing guttering from a ladder

I need to replace the guttering and clad the facia boards on my house. I
plan to attempt this using a ladder. I've seen ladder attachments that keep
the top of the ladder about a foot or more away from the top of the wall,
so that you don't have t bend backwards while working on the guttering. Is
there a name for these attachments? What are they called, and where can I
get one cheaply?

Thank you,

Al
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Default Repairing guttering from a ladder

AL_n wrote:

I need to replace the guttering and clad the facia boards on my house. I
plan to attempt this using a ladder. I've seen ladder attachments that keep
the top of the ladder about a foot or more away from the top of the wall,
so that you don't have t bend backwards while working on the guttering. Is
there a name for these attachments? What are they called, and where can I
get one cheaply?


Stand-offs or stays.. Around £40 from Wickes.
http://www.wickes.co.uk/ladder-stay/invt/530039/
Others sell them too

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Default Repairing guttering from a ladder

I need to replace the guttering and clad the facia boards on my
house. I plan to attempt this using a ladder. I've seen ladder
attachments that keep the top of the ladder about a foot or more away
from the top of the wall, so that you don't have t bend backwards
while working on the guttering. Is there a name for these
attachments? What are they called, and where can I get one cheaply?

yes

ladder stand-off

all over the place for ~£25. Try your local supplier (eg where you are
buying the gutter etc) or the search engine of your choice : eg
http://www.google.co.uk/search?hl=en...70l401l1.2l3l0

in my v limited experience also well worth buying anchors to tie the
ladder to the wall: makes a big difference when you are waving around a
long length of gutter or floppy fascia in the wind
--
Robin
PM may be sent to rbw0{at}hotmail{dot}com


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Default Repairing guttering from a ladder

On 10/08/2011 07:34, AL_n wrote:
I need to replace the guttering and clad the facia boards on my house. I
plan to attempt this using a ladder. I've seen ladder attachments that keep
the top of the ladder about a foot or more away from the top of the wall,
so that you don't have t bend backwards while working on the guttering. Is
there a name for these attachments? What are they called, and where can I
get one cheaply?


Ladder stay, or ladder stand-off.

There are a couple at Screwfix - see:
http://www.screwfix.com/c/storage-ladders/ladder-accessories/cat831466

You say you want cheap - have to say that I think ladders is one area
where economy is not necessarily the best plan... personally, I havea
"Laddermax" which is brilliant - it's very easy to put on and off
(unlike most ladder accessories, which are a right fiddle); but best of
all it has a work-platform in front of you where you can put your tools
etc. It's really sturdy too, and you feel much more secure than when
at the top of a conventional ladder.

See http://tinyurl.com/3uwhzlk (or
http://www.haxnicks.co.uk/gardening/diy-builder-products/laddermax/?gclid=CL3vuOGTxKoCFdFc4Qodkzssxw&)
- Google may come up with a cheaper supplier?

David


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Default Repairing guttering from a ladder

On 10/08/2011 07:34, AL_n wrote:
I need to replace the guttering and clad the facia boards on my house. I
plan to attempt this using a ladder. I've seen ladder attachments that keep
the top of the ladder about a foot or more away from the top of the wall,
so that you don't have t bend backwards while working on the guttering. Is
there a name for these attachments? What are they called, and where can I
get one cheaply?

Thank you,

Al


Stand off as others have said. I rarely go up a ladder without using
one, they make a huge difference.

I'd also suggest you get one of these; http://www.laddermat.co.uk/



--
Dave - The Medway Handyman www.medwayhandyman.co.uk


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Default Repairing guttering from a ladder

In message , A.Lee
writes
AL_n wrote:

I need to replace the guttering and clad the facia boards on my house. I
plan to attempt this using a ladder. I've seen ladder attachments that keep
the top of the ladder about a foot or more away from the top of the wall,
so that you don't have t bend backwards while working on the guttering. Is
there a name for these attachments? What are they called, and where can I
get one cheaply?


Stand-offs or stays.. Around £40 from Wickes.
http://www.wickes.co.uk/ladder-stay/invt/530039/
Others sell them too


Useful to have a shallow tray on top to hold parts and tools etc.

regards


--
Tim Lamb
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Default Repairing guttering from a ladder

On 10/08/2011 07:34, AL_n wrote:
I need to replace the guttering and clad the facia boards on my house. I
plan to attempt this using a ladder....


IME, that needs two people and two ladders. A length of guttering is a
difficult object to hold at the top of a ladder.

Colin Bignell
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Default Repairing guttering from a ladder

On Wed, 10 Aug 2011 08:11:39 +0100, Lobster
wrote:


You say you want cheap - have to say that I think ladders is one area
where economy is not necessarily the best plan... personally, I havea
"Laddermax" which is brilliant - it's very easy to put on and off
(unlike most ladder accessories, which are a right fiddle); but best of
all it has a work-platform in front of you where you can put your tools
etc. It's really sturdy too, and you feel much more secure than when
at the top of a conventional ladder.

See http://tinyurl.com/3uwhzlk (or
http://www.haxnicks.co.uk/gardening/diy-builder-products/laddermax/?gclid=CL3vuOGTxKoCFdFc4Qodkzssxw&)


Agree - I use that one when clearing the gutters etc.
Only problem we (+wife) find is that it adds quite a bit of weight
right at the end of a long lever arm so moving the ladder is
'interesting'.

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Default Repairing guttering from a ladder

On Wednesday, August 10, 2011 9:22:22 AM UTC+1, Nightjar wrote:
On 10/08/2011 07:34, AL_n wrote:
I need to replace the guttering and clad the facia boards on my house. I
plan to attempt this using a ladder....


IME, that needs two people and two ladders. A length of guttering is a
difficult object to hold at the top of a ladder.

Colin Bignell


I put up a loop of rope to hold the other end. Temporary supports is the 1st rule of doing jobs on your own.
Simon.
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Default Repairing guttering from a ladder

In article ,
Geo wrote:


"Laddermax" which is brilliant - it's very easy to put on and off
(unlike most ladder accessories, which are a right fiddle); but best of
all it has a work-platform in front of you where you can put your tools
etc. It's really sturdy too, and you feel much more secure than when
at the top of a conventional ladder.

See http://tinyurl.com/3uwhzlk


Agree - I use that one when clearing the gutters etc.
Only problem we (+wife) find is that it adds quite a bit of weight
right at the end of a long lever arm so moving the ladder is
'interesting'.



Ditto, Geo. To the extent where I can barely lift the ladder sometimes.
I'm not tiny (5'8", 11stone, pretty fit), but I struggle with this.

When I do get manage to get the Laddermax up, it's great, but I find it
very hard to (a) put the ladder up in the first place and (b) get the
Ladder Max in *just* the right position in some applications. (Having
said that it's been great for gutters)

I've even been thinking of buying a different one, which is lighter
(Screwfix have one at 29.99).

John


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Default Repairing guttering from a ladder

In message , The Medway Handyman
writes
On 10/08/2011 07:34, AL_n wrote:
I need to replace the guttering and clad the facia boards on my house. I
plan to attempt this using a ladder. I've seen ladder attachments that keep
the top of the ladder about a foot or more away from the top of the wall,
so that you don't have t bend backwards while working on the guttering. Is
there a name for these attachments? What are they called, and where can I
get one cheaply?

Thank you,

Al


Stand off as others have said. I rarely go up a ladder without using
one, they make a huge difference.

I'd also suggest you get one of these; http://www.laddermat.co.uk/



Yup, I've got the ladder mat as well (after a recommendation her from
Dave), works well.

Re the standoffs. Cehck how deep your soffits are. I had to buy a deeper
one, as we have deep soffits on our current house and the old one (which
is the size most commonly sold by Screwfix etc) wasn't big enough
--
Chris French

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Default Repairing guttering from a ladder

AL_n wrote:
I need to replace the guttering and clad the facia boards on my
house. I plan to attempt this using a ladder. I've seen ladder
attachments that keep the top of the ladder about a foot or more away
from the top of the wall, so that you don't have t bend backwards
while working on the guttering. Is there a name for these
attachments? What are they called, and where can I get one cheaply?

Thank you,

Al



If it's a one-off job, just hire one, or preferably two and a second ladder
as you'll probably need another bod to give you a hand.

A few tips if you've never done this type of thing befo

use polytops (white pvc headed, stainless steel nails) to affix the fascia,
and be carefull with them - they bend and snap very easily and getting them
out is practically impossible without mangling the face of the board. keep
lines of fixings straight and neat as they are visible from down below.

Also when hammering them home, stop when the head is a few mm away from the
face and lightly tap it just so the head touches the fascia - the surface of
it pulls in and it looks hideous if you rattle the nails home.

once your fascias are on, screw the outlet where it needs to be (in relation
to the downpipe) and position it as low as possible on the fascia without it
looking ridiculous.
then screw on the bracket (or jointer if it's a terrace) as high up the
fascia as possible - even if it''s touching the tiles/slates.

tie a string line tightly on top of the bracket, and through the outlet of
the outlet, so that all the other brackets between can be offered up to the
stringline.

Don't guess distances between brackets, cut a marker about 30 - 35 inches
and screw a bracket on (don't use pen or anything else to mark the fascias
as it won't come off)

there's 3 holes in each bracket, you only need 2 screws max, and I'd use
stainless if possible, everything else rusts and it stains the fascia below
each bracket.

Don't use 5m lengths of guttering in full lengths unless it's white - brown
and black absorb so much heat on hot days that they twist, and in winter
they shrink, often pulling themsleves out of joints etc, cut 5m lengths into
2.5s and buy a few extra straight jointers


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Phil L wrote:
once your fascias are on, screw the outlet where it needs to be (in
relation to the downpipe) and position it as low as possible on the
fascia without it looking ridiculous.
then screw on the bracket (or jointer if it's a terrace) as high up
the fascia as possible - even if it''s touching the tiles/slates.


This should be:
then screw on the farthest away bracket (or jointer if it's a terrace) as
high up the
fascia as possible - even if it''s touching the tiles/slates.



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Default Repairing guttering from a ladder

On 10/08/2011 10:28, sm_jamieson wrote:
On Wednesday, August 10, 2011 9:22:22 AM UTC+1, Nightjar wrote:
On 10/08/2011 07:34, AL_n wrote:
I need to replace the guttering and clad the facia boards on my house. I
plan to attempt this using a ladder....


IME, that needs two people and two ladders. A length of guttering is a
difficult object to hold at the top of a ladder.

Colin Bignell


I put up a loop of rope to hold the other end. Temporary supports is the 1st rule of doing jobs on your own.
Simon.


To my mind, the first rule of working a couple of stories up on a ladder
is not to do it on your own. I also have a problem envisaging a safe way
to use a loop of rope to hold the other end of a six foot length of
guttering when you need to go up 20 feet, holding the other end.

Colin Bignell

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I put up a loop of rope to hold the other end. Temporary supports is
the 1st rule of doing jobs on your own.


To my mind, the first rule of working a couple of stories up on a
ladder is not to do it on your own. I also have a problem envisaging
a safe way to use a loop of rope to hold the other end of a six foot
length of guttering when you need to go up 20 feet, holding the other
end.

It's patently easier with 2 but I have just fitted fascia and refitted
gutter alone when the helper had to cry off*. Admittedly I had 2
ladders which made life easier but I did not have problems with 5m
lengths of fascia and 4m lengths of gutter. I used several loops of
rope, temporarily looped around rafters, to slide them into. I also
found that both would rest on the roof so long as the wind was not high.

One point I would stress since the OP mentions cladding the fascia was
that I was (as a novice) surprised how floppy uPVC fascia was compared
with wood. I couldn't raise a 5m length or slide it into the loops like
a "pole" as it flopped about all over the place. I imagine the thinner
uPVC cladding would be even worse. But with luck an expert will be
along shortly to confirm/correct/tell us what I ought to have done.

*I did have someone in doors briefed to phone the FB if she heard the
traditional FT
--
Robin
PM may be sent to rbw0{at}hotmail{dot}com




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"Robin" wrote in :


I put up a loop of rope to hold the other end. Temporary supports is
the 1st rule of doing jobs on your own.


To my mind, the first rule of working a couple of stories up on a
ladder is not to do it on your own. I also have a problem envisaging
a safe way to use a loop of rope to hold the other end of a six foot
length of guttering when you need to go up 20 feet, holding the other
end.

It's patently easier with 2 but I have just fitted fascia and refitted
gutter alone when the helper had to cry off*. Admittedly I had 2
ladders which made life easier but I did not have problems with 5m
lengths of fascia and 4m lengths of gutter. I used several loops of
rope, temporarily looped around rafters, to slide them into. I also
found that both would rest on the roof so long as the wind was not high.

One point I would stress since the OP mentions cladding the fascia was
that I was (as a novice) surprised how floppy uPVC fascia was compared
with wood. I couldn't raise a 5m length or slide it into the loops like
a "pole" as it flopped about all over the place. I imagine the thinner
uPVC cladding would be even worse. But with luck an expert will be
along shortly to confirm/correct/tell us what I ought to have done.

*I did have someone in doors briefed to phone the FB if she heard the
traditional FT


It's good to hear from someone who has done it single handed. Your input is
very helpful. I do most jobs single handed, even when everyone tells me I
shouldn't! It's surprising what one can accomplish with concentration. The
main difficuly is that I donlt have much room to put the ladder, except by
having it extremely steep. So I may be forced to hire some scaffolding at
the end of the day. Not really my style, as it costs...

Al
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Default Repairing guttering from a ladder

"Phil L" wrote in
:

AL_n wrote:
I need to replace the guttering and clad the facia boards on my
house. I plan to attempt this using a ladder. I've seen ladder
attachments that keep the top of the ladder about a foot or more away
from the top of the wall, so that you don't have t bend backwards
while working on the guttering. Is there a name for these
attachments? What are they called, and where can I get one cheaply?

Thank you,

Al



If it's a one-off job, just hire one, or preferably two and a second
ladder as you'll probably need another bod to give you a hand.

A few tips if you've never done this type of thing befo

use polytops (white pvc headed, stainless steel nails) to affix the
fascia, and be carefull with them - they bend and snap very easily and
getting them out is practically impossible without mangling the face
of the board. keep lines of fixings straight and neat as they are
visible from down below.

Also when hammering them home, stop when the head is a few mm away
from the face and lightly tap it just so the head touches the fascia -
the surface of it pulls in and it looks hideous if you rattle the
nails home.

once your fascias are on, screw the outlet where it needs to be (in
relation to the downpipe) and position it as low as possible on the
fascia without it looking ridiculous.
then screw on the bracket (or jointer if it's a terrace) as high up
the fascia as possible - even if it''s touching the tiles/slates.

tie a string line tightly on top of the bracket, and through the
outlet of the outlet, so that all the other brackets between can be
offered up to the stringline.

Don't guess distances between brackets, cut a marker about 30 - 35
inches and screw a bracket on (don't use pen or anything else to mark
the fascias as it won't come off)

there's 3 holes in each bracket, you only need 2 screws max, and I'd
use stainless if possible, everything else rusts and it stains the
fascia below each bracket.

Don't use 5m lengths of guttering in full lengths unless it's white -
brown and black absorb so much heat on hot days that they twist, and
in winter they shrink, often pulling themsleves out of joints etc, cut
5m lengths into 2.5s and buy a few extra straight jointers


Many thanks for your tips and advice. Just what I needed! Yes, I will be
using those white-headed stainlesss pins. I need to remove the old
guttering and hopefully re-use it. It is the brown deepflow polypipe
stuff, and you are right, it has got a little distorted. Perhpas I ought
to ditch the old and use 100% new guttering. The old stuff has been up
for 20 years. I'm not sure how long it is supposed to last...

Al

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"Phil L" wrote in
:

This should be:
then screw on the farthest away bracket (or jointer if it's a terrace)
as high up the
fascia as possible - even if it''s touching the tiles/slates.


Understood. Thanks.

Al
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In article , AL_n
scribeth thus
"Robin" wrote in :


I put up a loop of rope to hold the other end. Temporary supports is
the 1st rule of doing jobs on your own.

To my mind, the first rule of working a couple of stories up on a
ladder is not to do it on your own. I also have a problem envisaging
a safe way to use a loop of rope to hold the other end of a six foot
length of guttering when you need to go up 20 feet, holding the other
end.

It's patently easier with 2 but I have just fitted fascia and refitted
gutter alone when the helper had to cry off*. Admittedly I had 2
ladders which made life easier but I did not have problems with 5m
lengths of fascia and 4m lengths of gutter. I used several loops of
rope, temporarily looped around rafters, to slide them into. I also
found that both would rest on the roof so long as the wind was not high.

One point I would stress since the OP mentions cladding the fascia was
that I was (as a novice) surprised how floppy uPVC fascia was compared
with wood. I couldn't raise a 5m length or slide it into the loops like
a "pole" as it flopped about all over the place. I imagine the thinner
uPVC cladding would be even worse. But with luck an expert will be
along shortly to confirm/correct/tell us what I ought to have done.

*I did have someone in doors briefed to phone the FB if she heard the
traditional FT


It's good to hear from someone who has done it single handed. Your input is
very helpful. I do most jobs single handed, even when everyone tells me I
shouldn't! It's surprising what one can accomplish with concentration. The
main difficuly is that I donlt have much room to put the ladder, except by
having it extremely steep.



Bin there dun that and lucky to have got away with it;!..

Is it really worth the risk the fall I had the other year was a month in
hospital and very very lucky not to be gibbering away brain damaged in a
wheelchair...


So I may be forced to hire some scaffolding at
the end of the day. Not really my style, as it costs...

Al


Yes what's your health worth and life come to that?..
--
Tony Sayer



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On 10/08/2011 19:09, AL_n wrote:
wrote in :


I put up a loop of rope to hold the other end. Temporary supports is
the 1st rule of doing jobs on your own.

To my mind, the first rule of working a couple of stories up on a
ladder is not to do it on your own. I also have a problem envisaging
a safe way to use a loop of rope to hold the other end of a six foot
length of guttering when you need to go up 20 feet, holding the other
end.

It's patently easier with 2 but I have just fitted fascia and refitted
gutter alone when the helper had to cry off*. Admittedly I had 2
ladders which made life easier but I did not have problems with 5m
lengths of fascia and 4m lengths of gutter. I used several loops of
rope, temporarily looped around rafters, to slide them into. I also
found that both would rest on the roof so long as the wind was not high.

One point I would stress since the OP mentions cladding the fascia was
that I was (as a novice) surprised how floppy uPVC fascia was compared
with wood. I couldn't raise a 5m length or slide it into the loops like
a "pole" as it flopped about all over the place. I imagine the thinner
uPVC cladding would be even worse. But with luck an expert will be
along shortly to confirm/correct/tell us what I ought to have done.

*I did have someone in doors briefed to phone the FB if she heard the
traditional FT


It's good to hear from someone who has done it single handed. Your input is
very helpful. I do most jobs single handed, even when everyone tells me I
shouldn't! It's surprising what one can accomplish with concentration. The
main difficuly is that I donlt have much room to put the ladder, except by
having it extremely steep. So I may be forced to hire some scaffolding at
the end of the day. Not really my style, as it costs...


Much safer and much easier to do the job single handed.

Colin Bignell


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In message , AL_n
writes
"Phil L" wrote in
:

AL_n wrote:
I need to replace the guttering and clad the facia boards on my
house. I plan to attempt this using a ladder. I've seen ladder
attachments that keep the top of the ladder about a foot or more away
from the top of the wall, so that you don't have t bend backwards
while working on the guttering. Is there a name for these
attachments? What are they called, and where can I get one cheaply?

Thank you,

Al



If it's a one-off job, just hire one, or preferably two and a second
ladder as you'll probably need another bod to give you a hand.

A few tips if you've never done this type of thing befo

snip


Many thanks for your tips and advice. Just what I needed! Yes, I will be
using those white-headed stainlesss pins. I need to remove the old
guttering and hopefully re-use it. It is the brown deepflow polypipe
stuff, and you are right, it has got a little distorted. Perhpas I ought
to ditch the old and use 100% new guttering. The old stuff has been up
for 20 years. I'm not sure how long it is supposed to last...


I'd use new, given the effort required to get the stuff up.

--
Chris French

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on 10/08/2011, Nightjar supposed :
On 10/08/2011 10:28, sm_jamieson wrote:
On Wednesday, August 10, 2011 9:22:22 AM UTC+1, Nightjar wrote:
On 10/08/2011 07:34, AL_n wrote:
I need to replace the guttering and clad the facia boards on my house. I
plan to attempt this using a ladder....

IME, that needs two people and two ladders. A length of guttering is a
difficult object to hold at the top of a ladder.

Colin Bignell


I put up a loop of rope to hold the other end. Temporary supports is the
1st rule of doing jobs on your own.
Simon.


To my mind, the first rule of working a couple of stories up on a ladder is
not to do it on your own. I also have a problem envisaging a safe way to use
a loop of rope to hold the other end of a six foot length of guttering when
you need to go up 20 feet, holding the other end.

Colin Bignell


That is how I did soffits, gutters and facias. Loop of rope fixed where
the far end of the length would be, then a long rope through that
lashed to the far end of what ever I was trying to install. Lashed on
and as these things are so slippy, add some gaffa tape to stop the
lashing slipping.

For facias...

Pull the section up, tie the loose end of the rope then climb up and
fix the nearest end in place temporary, then move to far end to fix
that temporarily, back to near end and fix properly.

For gutters you just fix the brackets all the way along on the facia
first and you can then just lift it into place with one hand onto the
brackets then use the brackets to support whilst you slide it to the
correct location.



--
Regards,
Harry (M1BYT) (L)
http://www.ukradioamateur.co.uk


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AL_n explained on 10/08/2011 :
"Robin" wrote in :


I put up a loop of rope to hold the other end. Temporary supports is
the 1st rule of doing jobs on your own.

To my mind, the first rule of working a couple of stories up on a
ladder is not to do it on your own. I also have a problem envisaging
a safe way to use a loop of rope to hold the other end of a six foot
length of guttering when you need to go up 20 feet, holding the other
end.

It's patently easier with 2 but I have just fitted fascia and refitted
gutter alone when the helper had to cry off*. Admittedly I had 2
ladders which made life easier but I did not have problems with 5m
lengths of fascia and 4m lengths of gutter. I used several loops of
rope, temporarily looped around rafters, to slide them into. I also
found that both would rest on the roof so long as the wind was not high.

One point I would stress since the OP mentions cladding the fascia was
that I was (as a novice) surprised how floppy uPVC fascia was compared
with wood. I couldn't raise a 5m length or slide it into the loops like
a "pole" as it flopped about all over the place. I imagine the thinner
uPVC cladding would be even worse. But with luck an expert will be
along shortly to confirm/correct/tell us what I ought to have done.

*I did have someone in doors briefed to phone the FB if she heard the
traditional FT


It's good to hear from someone who has done it single handed. Your input is
very helpful. I do most jobs single handed, even when everyone tells me I
shouldn't! It's surprising what one can accomplish with concentration. The
main difficuly is that I donlt have much room to put the ladder, except by
having it extremely steep. So I may be forced to hire some scaffolding at
the end of the day. Not really my style, as it costs...

Al


Steep is OK, providing you lash the ladder close to the top first.

--
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Many thanks for your tips and advice. Just what I needed! Yes, I will be
using those white-headed stainlesss pins. I need to remove the old
guttering and hopefully re-use it. It is the brown deepflow polypipe
stuff, and you are right, it has got a little distorted. Perhpas I ought
to ditch the old and use 100% new guttering. The old stuff has been up
for 20 years. I'm not sure how long it is supposed to last...

Al

I'm about to replace some distorted grey half round (22 years), but as
I'd prefer black I am going to use new. I have the luxury of a s/h
professional alloy tower (£600 from eBay). Don't skimp too much on the
number of brackets (which is what the previous "pro" installer did).
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Phil L expressed precisely :
use polytops (white pvc headed, stainless steel nails) to affix the fascia,
and be carefull with them - they bend and snap very easily and getting them
out is practically impossible without mangling the face of the board. keep
lines of fixings straight and neat as they are visible from down below.


I made up a template, to make sure they were in line. I also found I
needed to make up some ply strips to act as spacers the length and
width of the rafter ends, because the ends were not perfectly in line.
Fix the strips in place first, using a string line as a reference. Then
another string line to get the gutter brackets in line, but with th
correct fall.

I managed the complete job facias, soffits, gutters plus fall pipes
front and rear on our semi in a weekend - two of us, on two ladders but
only one long enough to reach the top.

It was one of those jobs I wouldn't trust to the pros to do to my
standards of straight,having seen some poor examples.

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Harry (M1BYT) (L)
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Newshound has brought this to us :

Many thanks for your tips and advice. Just what I needed! Yes, I will be
using those white-headed stainlesss pins. I need to remove the old
guttering and hopefully re-use it. It is the brown deepflow polypipe
stuff, and you are right, it has got a little distorted. Perhpas I ought
to ditch the old and use 100% new guttering. The old stuff has been up
for 20 years. I'm not sure how long it is supposed to last...

Al

I'm about to replace some distorted grey half round (22 years), but as I'd
prefer black I am going to use new. I have the luxury of a s/h professional
alloy tower (£600 from eBay). Don't skimp too much on the number of brackets
(which is what the previous "pro" installer did).


I interspersed a pair of pins, gutter bracket, pair of pins, bracket -
at each rafter end. I used 2" x 8 brass screws for the brackets, which
I just happened to have in stock. Stainless or brass, so there is no
chance of them rusting away.

--
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Harry (M1BYT) (L)
http://www.ukradioamateur.co.uk


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The main difficuly is that I donlt
have much room to put the ladder, except by having it extremely
steep.


Is that steep *before* you have fitted a stand off? If so remember that
the stand off will make it steeper still.

So I may be forced to hire some scaffolding at the end of the
day. Not really my style, as it costs...

But it doesn't cost as much as fu*******k, thump. At the very least I
echo the point about tying off the ladder at the top to solid anchors.

--
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A few tips if you've never done this type of thing befo

FWIW that seemed to me good stuff for a Wiki entry.

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On 10/08/2011 22:36, Harry Bloomfield wrote:
on 10/08/2011, Nightjar supposed :
On 10/08/2011 10:28, sm_jamieson wrote:
On Wednesday, August 10, 2011 9:22:22 AM UTC+1, Nightjar wrote:
On 10/08/2011 07:34, AL_n wrote:
I need to replace the guttering and clad the facia boards on my
house. I
plan to attempt this using a ladder....

IME, that needs two people and two ladders. A length of guttering is a
difficult object to hold at the top of a ladder.

Colin Bignell

I put up a loop of rope to hold the other end. Temporary supports is
the 1st rule of doing jobs on your own.
Simon.


To my mind, the first rule of working a couple of stories up on a
ladder is not to do it on your own. I also have a problem envisaging a
safe way to use a loop of rope to hold the other end of a six foot
length of guttering when you need to go up 20 feet, holding the other
end.

Colin Bignell


That is how I did soffits, gutters and facias. Loop of rope fixed where
the far end of the length would be, then a long rope through that lashed
to the far end of what ever I was trying to install. Lashed on and as
these things are so slippy, add some gaffa tape to stop the lashing
slipping.

For facias...

Pull the section up, tie the loose end of the rope then climb up and fix
the nearest end in place temporary, then move to far end to fix that
temporarily, back to near end and fix properly.

For gutters you just fix the brackets all the way along on the facia
first and you can then just lift it into place with one hand onto the
brackets then use the brackets to support whilst you slide it to the
correct location.


Last time I replaced gutters, they were made of cast iron - definitely
not something that could be held in one hand. They were also Ogee form
and were attached by screws through the back upstand - no brackets. That
was a job that had to be done from scaffolding.

Colin Bignell

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On 10 Aug,
chris French wrote:

Re the standoffs. Cehck how deep your soffits are. I had to buy a deeper
one, as we have deep soffits on our current house and the old one (which
is the size most commonly sold by Screwfix etc) wasn't big enough


Mine is adjustable, I think it came from Machine Mart. The downside is it
just contacts teh wall in two places.


For the OP's job, after initial work and inspection I got in scaffolding (at
a very reasonable price) to complete the job[1]. It was much easier.


[1] I also had to strip off the bottom rows of tiles, and those at the verge
in order to replace the felt which had been wrongly/badly fitted when the
house was built.

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