Home Project FYI. Your Home Project Information and Idea Place

Help and Ideas For Your Home Remodeling Project

Home Project FYI. Your Home Project Information and Idea Place - Help and Ideas For Your Home Remodeling Project

Ice Dams

Ice Dams. What are they?

Ice dams are a ridge of ice that forms at the edge of a roof and prevents melting snow from draining. As water backs up behind ice dams, it can leak through the roof and cause damage to walls, ceilings, insulation and other areas.

How do ice dams form?

Ice dams are formed by an interaction between snow cover, outside temperatures, and heat lost through the roof. Specifically, there must be snow on the roof, warm  portions of the upper roof (warmer than 32° F), and cold portions of the lower roof (at freezing or below). Melted snow from the warmer areas will refreeze when it flows down to the colder portions, forming an ice dam.

Although the primary contributor to snow melting is heat loss from the building’s interior, solar radiation can also provide sufficient heat to melt snow on a roof. For example, in southern Canada, enough sunlight can be transmitted through 6 inches (150 mm) of snow cover on a clear and sunny day to cause melting at the roof’s surface even when the outside temperature is 14° F (-10° C), with an attic temperature of 23° F (-5° C).

Gutters do not cause ice dams to form, contrary to popular belief. Gutters do, however, help concentrate ice from ice dams in a vulnerable area, where parts of the house can peel away under the weight of the ice and come crashing to the ground.

Problems Associated with Ice Dams

Ice dams are problematic because they force water to leak from the roof into the building envelope. This may lead to:

  • rotted roof decking, exterior and interior walls, and framing;
  • respiratory illnesses (allergies, asthma, etc.) caused by mold growth;
  • reduced effectiveness of insulation. Wet insulation doesn’t work well, and chronically wet insulation will not decompress even when it dries. Without working insulation, even more heat will escape to the roof where more snow will melt, causing more ice dams which, in turn, will lead to leaks; and
  • peeling paint. Water from the leak will infiltrate wall cavities and cause paint to peel and blister. This may happen long after the ice dam has melted and thus not appear directly related to the ice dam.

Prevention of Ice Dams

  • Keep the entire roof cold. This can be accomplished by implementing the following measures:
  • Install a metal roof. Ice dams may occur on metal roofs, but the design of the roof will not allow the melting water to penetrate the roof’s surface. Also,
  • Ice dams on houses snow and ice are more likely to slide off of a smooth, metal surface than asphalt shingles.
  • Seal all air leaks in the attic floor, such as those surrounding wire and plumbing penetrations, attic hatches, and ceiling light fixtures leading to the attic from the living space below.
  • Increase the thickness of insulation on the attic floor, ductwork, and chimneys that pass through the attic.
  • Move or elevate exhaust systems that terminate just above the roof, where they are likely to melt snow from ice dams.
  • A minimum of 3″ air space is recommended between the top of insulation and roof sheathing in sloped ceilings.
  • Remove snow from the roof. This can be accomplished safely using a roof rake from the ground. Be careful not to harm roofing materials or to dislodge dangerous icicles.
  • Create channels in the ice by hosing it with warm water. Because this process intentionally adds water to the roof, this should be done only in emergencies where a great deal of water is already flowing through the roof, and when temperatures are warm enough that the hose water can drain before it freezes.

Prevention and Removal Methods to Avoid on Ice Dams

  • electric heat cables. These rarely work, they require an effort to install, they use electricity, and they can make shingles brittle.
  • manual removal of ice dams using shovels, hammers, ice picks, rakes, or whatever destructive items can be found in the shed. The roof can be easily damaged by these efforts, as can the homeowner, when they slip off of the icy roof.

Ice dams are caused by inadequate attic insulation, but homeowners can take certain preventative measures to ensure that they are rare.

TumblrShare

Wind Damage To Homes

WIND DAMAGE CHARACTERISTICS

  • Direct and Indirect Damage
  • Determining Wind Direction
  • Material Condition
  • Building Characteristics
  • Mitigating Factors

Wind damage can be broken down into two basic types:  direct and indirect.

Direct damage occurs in conditions where roofing materials have been blown off, or have been damaged or displaced.

Indirect damage is sustained from objects blown by the wind, which are referred to as ”missiles.”

Wind Damage From “Missiles”

Roof-covering materials — especially more brittle materials, such as tile – may be damaged by wind-blown debris called “missiles”.  Missiles can include other roofing on the home which has been pulled loose by the wind and blown onto roofing on adjacent roof slopes, or tree limbs, gravel, yard apparatus, or anything else capable of damaging roofing that has been carried aloft by the wind.

Bird got blown into the house from the wind

Missiles aren’t always items that were laying around the yard. Anything that has blown through the air and damages the roof or siding can be called a missile.

Wind damage

This particular missile was flying through the air under its own power before it was caught in a strong gust and blown into the side of the house.

Material Condition and Wind Damage

Wind will damage materials in poor condition before it damages materials in good condition. In addition to deterioration of the roofing material itself, fastening systems deteriorate. In some systems, such as slate, the fasteners may be the weakest part of the system, corroding to a point at which wind will cause them to fail.

BUILDING CHARACTERISTICS

The nature of wind damage is also affected by the characteristics of the buildings themselves.

The important building characteristics which affect the potential for wind damage include the following.

Age of Home

Many new building materials and methods have been developed over the past 30 years. At the same time, our understanding of how buildings operate and react to conditions has improved, and, as a result, building codes have become more stringent.

Type of Construction

Wind damage

Wind damage varies with the type of construction.  For example, mobile and modular homes are more likely to suffer damage than homes with a more substantial structure and higher-quality materials.

Building Quality and Wind Damage

Some types of roofing materials are more vulnerable to wind damage than others. The type and quality of both the installation and the materials used in the roofing system will affect the chances for wind damage.

Roof Shape and Slope

Roof structures of different styles obviously have different shapes. Each shape will affect wind behavior differently, as well as the location and amount of damage.

Wind damage

Wind blowing parallel to the ridge of a gable roof will blow along the roof-covering materials, offering less chance for damage than wind blowing at a home that has a hip roof. The exception is the potential for damage along the rakes, and the potential for inflation, if wind gets beneath the roof-covering materials.

Wind damage

The hip roof will have a section of roof positioned perpendicular to the wind, offering more resistance and greater opportunity for damage to occur. The potential will vary somewhat with the type of roof-covering material and the quality of installation.

More About Wind and Wind Damage

 

TumblrShare
SEO Powered by Platinum SEO from Techblissonline