Beagle2 Posted August 24, 2023 Share Posted August 24, 2023 Hello, I'm doing a small barn conversion and am working on the eaves detail. This blog post from LABC appears good, but when studied the diagram makes no sense (to me :)). Tilt fillet or proprietary eaves ventilator? | LABC The LABC blog states "The tiles shouldn’t be just rested on the fascia board as that is not what it is for, it’s bad practice, and makes replacement fascia work harder." However the diagram shows exactly this, all be it resting on a ventilator strip (secured to the fascia). All the examples I can see online (Tyvek technical manual, NHBC 7.2.19 etc) show the first course resting on the fascia. If a slate can't rest on the fascia then what is done? add a lower batten a few mm above the fascia? LABC are not responding and looks like someone else has asked this in the comments Thanks Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
benben5555 Posted August 24, 2023 Share Posted August 24, 2023 I think it is common practice to just rest it on the fascia / ventilator. Also in my opinion, don't really need the tilting fillet as the felt support tray is quite rigid. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Big Jimbo Posted August 24, 2023 Share Posted August 24, 2023 crack on. As above by @benben5555 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Temp Posted August 24, 2023 Share Posted August 24, 2023 Quote The only way to ensure that water does not collect in the sag of the membrane and runs into the gutter is to support it with a rigid timber or plywood board between the top of the fascia board and the first tile batten for the full length of the fascia board. In other words they expect the "tilting fillet" to be a board (or tapered board) not lots of individual wedges. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Beagle2 Posted August 25, 2023 Author Share Posted August 25, 2023 14 hours ago, Temp said: In other words they expect the "tilting fillet" to be a board (or tapered board) not lots of individual wedges. but how does that work in the diagram, a continuous ‘tilting fillet’ would block the over fascia vent? I assumed with an over fascia vent you’d use individual wedges at each rafter and a felt support tray. (that’s what I was planning to do :)) Thanks everyone for the input Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bassanclan Posted August 25, 2023 Share Posted August 25, 2023 Its resting on an eaves felt support tray https://www.roofingsuperstore.co.uk/product/rigid-felt-support-trays.html Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Temp Posted August 25, 2023 Share Posted August 25, 2023 (edited) 3 hours ago, Beagle2 said: but how does that work in the diagram, a continuous ‘tilting fillet’ would block the over fascia vent? I assumed with an over fascia vent you’d use individual wedges at each rafter and a felt support tray. (that’s what I was planning to do :)) Thanks everyone for the input Humm yes I'm wrong. Must just be testing on the plastic support trays but these aren't very strong. I used a vapour permeable membrane and insulation between rafters so didn't need vents. Edited August 25, 2023 by Temp Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bassanclan Posted August 25, 2023 Share Posted August 25, 2023 4 hours ago, Beagle2 said: but how does that work in the diagram, a continuous ‘tilting fillet’ would block the over fascia vent? I assumed with an over fascia vent you’d use individual wedges at each rafter and a felt support tray. (that’s what I was planning to do :)) Thanks everyone for the input Tilting fillets are not continous, but a wedge cut and nailed to each rafter Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
joe90 Posted August 25, 2023 Share Posted August 25, 2023 2 hours ago, bassanclan said: Its resting on an eaves felt support tray https://www.roofingsuperstore.co.uk/product/rigid-felt-support-trays.html This is the best way to do this. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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