Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

Can't remember if that has a name. 

 

There will be some lead shaped into an inverted V or ^ , bit like a long ridge tile. One end of that will be interleaved with the tiles on the main pitch like you would a soaker. The other end goes under the end ridge tile. So I think the lead will be all be hidden when viewing the side elevation on the left of your drawing. 

 

Where the lower pitch meets the gable wall soakers will be used. The top most of these will be up under the verge and under the lead described above. The lead upstand against the wall will be visible but shouldn't be any need for lead on top of the tiles. If the gable wall is brick this area would look something like this stepped flashing.

 

I can't find a drawing of the whole thing.

 

RoofStepFlashing-1ac57061ba7444ec94a281676314bb91.thumb.jpg.91643a4b120acc1facfb10c835cadcc0.jpg

 

 

Posted
  On 02/07/2023 at 09:12, Kai casswell said:

That only shows a duo pitch onto a gable wall. Mines a little different and having searched the internet I still can’t find an example. I’ll try again using the keyword saddle as I expect that’s involved somehow- thanks. 

Expand  

Half a saddle 🤷‍♂️, it will have to me made on site in lead. Are you DIYing this or using a roofer, any decent roofer would know how to do it, or there is enough knowledge here to walk you through it 👍

Posted

I still haven't found you a drawing so I edited something off the web. This is what I was trying to describe above. Some of the details will depend on the type of tile.

 

The saddle extends several tiles either side of the join between ridge and main roof pitch. 

 

I suggest asking your tile vendor if they have a drawing.

 

 

Ridgemeetsverge.thumb.jpg.87e4d3aac9f54b4410acd525b6b471cd.jpg

Posted

Ah ha that’s brilliant. I’m using plain tiles double lap so should be able to make something.  I Have done a bit of lead works over the years. 
thank you both for your help. 

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...