Chicago Repair and Replacement Parts Network   >   By Location   >   Naperville   >   Fans and Blower   >   Roofing construction & estimating

Roofing construction & estimating


Roofing construction & estimating
Installation, repair and estimating for nearly every type of roof covering available today in residential and commercial structures: asphalt shingles, roll roofing, wood shingles and shakes, clay tile, slate, metal, built-up, and elastomeric.
Covers sheathing and underlayment techniques, as well as secrets for installing leakproof valleys. Many estimating tips help you minimize waste, as well as insure a profit on every job. Troubleshooting techniques help you identify the true source of most leaks.
Over 300 large, clear illustrations help you find the answer to just about all your roofing questions.
Measuring and Calculating Roofs
If you're like some roofing contractors, you estimate roofing quantities by calculating the area of a roof, then adding 10 percent for waste. That might be OK in a fat building market, but in a tight market you'll need a sharper pencil to compete successfully for the good jobs, and then make money on them. In this book, I'm going to show you how to make a quick and accurate takeoff for any kind of roof.
You'll also learn the latest and most acceptable roofing methods in an industry where installation practices are closely related to warranties. That's because material warranties may be invalid if you don't follow the manufacturer's recommendations for installation. Look here for general guidelines, but always follow the manufacturer's instructions to the letter.
New products come on the market every day to solve the complex roof covering requirements presented by modern building technology. Your job is to know as much as you can about those products. You also have to know how to install them so the job passes inspection and presents no future repair and maintenance problems. Callbacks are hard on your profit margin and they don't do your reputation any good either. Know as much as you can about your roofing business, and you'll avoid them.
This book is more than an estimating book for roofing contractors. It develops a system, beginning with Chapter 1, for all types of roofing materials and installation methods. We'll cover the entire roofing trade, including how to manage your crews and keep them safe. So let's get started.
When you construct a roof on a new building, you can get these measurements from the plans. On repair or replacement jobs, you'll probably have to take your pencil, clipboard and tape measure, haul out your ladder, climb onto the roof, and start measuring.
To avoid mistakes, or a second trip to the job site, develop a system for taking measurements. Use a 100-foot flexible tape which has a 1/2-inch grout hook at the "stupid" end of the tape. Flexible tapes are made of metal, or fiberglass-reinforced nylon fabric. Find a tape that's marked with highlights at 5-inch intervals to match the exposure of most composition shingles.
There is no cardinal rule for the sequence you use to measure a roof, as long as you don't miss anything. Here's a system that works for me:
Start by measuring the length of the eaves. On a gable roof, you only have to measure in one direction. On a hip roof, you'll have to measure the eaves in two directions.
Next, measure the width of the roof. On a gable roof, hook the tape over one of the eaves, and run it over the ridge to the opposite eave. On a hip roof, measure the width the same way. To measure the length, hook the tape to the eaves at the ridge rafter (look ahead to Figure 1-16 on page 13 for an illustration of the parts of a roof), run the tape the length of the ridge and down the opposite ridge rafter. Measure the ridge at the same time.
Now, measure the hips and valleys by hooking the tape to a building comer and running the tape to the ridge. You use these measurements to calculate material requirements such as valley flashing and hip-covering material.
Always make a sketch of the roof layout, including dimensions, roof slopes, location of penetrations and any unusual circumstances such as rotten deck areas, ventilation problems, or overhanging tree branches or other obstructions.
Once you have the measurements, you'll use them to calculate areas, slopes, angles, and allowance factors. Lets begin with an easy example.
The dimensions on the plans give you the actual measurements for a level roof. To get the area of a rectangular roof, multiply its length by its width.
Area of a level rectangular roof = L x W
where L is the length and W is the width.
Of course, not every roof you work on will be a single rectangle. You may need to figure the area of a roof like the one in Figure 1-1. There are two ways to calculate this area:
In the positive method, you divide the roof into rectangular areas, then add the parts to get the total area. See Figure 1-2.
With the negative method, you extend the roof lines to form a single rectangle. Calculate the area of this rectangle, and subtract the areas of the rectangular spaces which lie outside the actual roof. Figure 1-3 illustrates this.
Left: Figure 1-1 Roof Plan of Level Roof
Right: Figure 1-2 The Positive Method
Example 1-1: The Positive Method
Divide the roof into rectangles as shown in Figure 1-2. Calculate the area of each rectangle, then add them together:
Area A = 20 feet by 60 feet, or 1,200 square feet
Area B = 20 feet by 40 feet, or 800 square feet
Area C = 20 feet by 20 feet, or 400 square feet
1,200 SF + 800 SF + 400 SF, or 2,400 SF
Figure 1-3 The Negative Method
Example 1-2: The Negative Method
Extend the roof lines to form one rectangle, as in Figure 1-3. Calculate the total area of that rectangle, then subtract the areas of any rectangles which aren't in the actual roof:
Extended rectangle = 60' x 60' = 3,600 SF
Area A = 40 feet by 20 feet, or 800 square feet
Area B = 20 feet by 20 feet, or 400 square feet
Total area outside the roof layout is 800 SF + 400 SF, or 1,200 SF. Subtract that from the extended area to get the total area:
3,600 SF - 1,200 SF = 2,400 SF
You get the same answer both ways. So you might as well use the easiest method - the one that requires the fewest calculations. For example, in Figure 1-4 you'd have to calculate three areas, then add them together. But in Figure 1-5 you only have to calculate two areas, and then subtract one from the other.
(Roofing construction & estimating was posted and is owned by: Duane Bond)
Contact: duane_bond@chicagopartsnetwork.com (Duane Bond) (actual email hidden)
Contact duane_bond@chicagopartsnetwork.com (Duane Bond) for more information.

Flag any violation to moderators committee

Your flagging message:




Roofing construction & estimating