Sheet should go, heres your jack, take your paper 6 inches past it. Cut around to where the cut goes out. The next sheet in will with to the next penetration you have the area around the pipe and no extra cut. Theres no way people of do this themselves. How do they know the roofing contractor is doing it right. The issue i see is they dont use a roofing contractor to do it typically its an electric person or someone installing a dish on your house. They will drill through your roof and stick the cable back up and take and usually its just a gallon vanized flashing they take the glue and stick it down like that and they will plant top and say its done. Its done for a year and a half. After that year and a half its not an approved roofing practice. When you put a jack you need to roof the jack in. Now when i look at the penetration i see the roof. I dont see the metal with nails around and stuck to the roof. You see that its improperly installed. We use lead flashings. The galvanized is
Have a problem. Take one of my cards, give me a ring use one of the city moisture meters. It has 2 probes to stick in there. I was going to ask the way to handle dutch guterce. Dutch gutters. In San Francisco we have a particular problem. Houses are all next to each other you cant drain our house to the side because there is somebodys house there. You drain the water toward it and you catch the water. You put a board on the edge and the water hits to the front and the back. Its a common situation here. What i have seen in the past with the dutch gutters they have a really nice shingle roof and they come if in with the cap sheet 90 pound organic. Which is not strong at all. It doesnt take much to break it a life of 10 years. These days with the new materials that have come out. I have samples. If you notice this is conventional asphalt here. Its really hard. It will crack when its cold it will break in and a half. This here is asphalt thats treated with styrin and changes the characteri
Bamboo, although a popular garden feature, is actually highly invasive in the UK and can result in damaged driveways and high costs of eradication and repair. Read more here.