The drip edge is a great idea, but the valley flashing may not be as
necessary since most roofers will weave a valley.
Since I cannot see the roof, I am not sure what type of valley we are
speaking about and some valleys require metal flashing.
I just finished my roof and used 16 square of roofing, and the flashing cost
was 880.00 I of course had 6 skylights, and edge flashing in the mix.
I like the edge flashing that goes out about 1 1/4" and returns back with a
drop over the facia of about 1". On the lower eaves I do the pitch bend and
on the facia running up the rake it is straight out and back.
I researched this, and the flashing helps keep the water from coming in at
the edges and keeps the plywood dry.
In a bid like this, I would consider the more "educated" bid that uses edge
metal since the contractor is looking at details. I would also ask he he
can "weave" the valleys.
just my 2 cents.
Oh, in some cases we do use copper flashing also....Which raises the price
considerably.
I also like to paint the galvanized flashing before installation.
john
"Malcolm" wrote in message news:6824e$4e0c1a9c$45499b77$***@news.flashnewsgroups.com...
responding to
http://www.homeownershub.com/construction/Drip-edge-discouraged-6787-.htm
Malcolm wrote:
I'm in the process of getting reroofing estimates. The two companies I'm
interested in are approximately $800 apart in their bids: the more
expensive one includes drip edge on eaves and gable ends as well as
"valley iron," and the other company does not. Both companies have good
reputations in town.
Reading this entire thread has convinced me that drip edge is a good idea,
but is $800 for it (plus valley iron) excessive? (The footprint for the
house is 2400 sq. ft.)Perhaps I should just ask the cheaper company to add
the drip edge plus valley iron for an additional cost?
Any advice would be appreciated.
Malcolm
Post by RicodJourPost by GBI am getting reroofing bids for my 25 year old house in Northern
Virginia, and I have gotten conflicting advice regarding
installation of
drip edge.
The first roofer told me he does not recommend installing it
because it
is not necessary when the shingles are installed properly, and can cause
the shingles not to lay straight if the underlying roof structure has
irregularities.
The second roofer said that was nonsense, and they always install drip edge.
Drip edges perform a necessary function. All the information about
drip edge installation is right on the wrapper of _every_ bundle of
shingles, and it makes me wonder what other manufacturer\'s
instructions the first roofer doesn\'t think he needs to follow.
I had a similar situation with an excellent roofer. He said the drip
edge wasn\'t necessary and he never installed it. I told him I
required it even if he didn\'t, so he put it in. Don\'t throw out the
first roofer for this one little item.
BTW, if the underlying roof structure is irregular the shingles won\'t
lay right with or without the drip edge.
R
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