Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

Hi. Question for the roofers. My house was built in the 60's and the roof hasn't been replaced up until now. Or I'm in the process of doing it. I've stripped the back, re- felt and baton, re-tiled and it looks decent in my opinion. At some point before I moved in, the front had a dorma built. It wouldn't pass regs today, but it is solid. Proper old timbers, real wood. Not the rubbish the use today. I've stripped it back, and again re-felt and baton and I've nearly finished tiling. Did the same as the back of the house, measured down from the ridge, got my first baton right and worked up from there. But looking at it now. It looks like the tiles are running at an angle into the dorma and it's really bothering me. I've attached some images. Any advice welcome as my OCD is playing up.

PXL_20250514_115514699.jpg

PXL_20250518_181621831.jpg

PXL_20250519_185525312.jpg

Posted

When you say 'running out' I take it you mean running downhill to the dormer cheek. Am I right? I can see that )possibly) on the 1st pic (RHS) but not sure if I can see it on LHS, or whether I am just convincing myself I can! I am generally fairly pernickety, and I would not, I think, have picked up on that. How often will you stand and look at it? If it will annoy you forever, change it. If you can programme your eyes and brain to 'ignore', live with it.

 

Ah, I have just read again and seen:

On 19/05/2025 at 21:30, Daza said:

Any advice welcome as my OCD is playing up.

 

Hmm, maybe my advice above won't help then. I *suppose* you could basically eye it up, decide on what would look right to you, decide the adjustment required for the eaves course, alter the battens accordingly and go from  there. I cannot think of a more 'scientific' way. If that helps a little, good. If it doesn't, sorry.

Posted

All I can see is something wrong with the very top row of tiles on the lefthand side.

 

PXL_20250519_185525312.thumb.jpg.5cf9720afe545f358b40afbc01ff4179.jpg.b616cfd470917b91f1399985e7d632ff.jpg

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...