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Roof cement to adhere shingles?

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Roof cement to adhere shingles? beerguzzler50 11-08-2007
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Posted by Don Young on November 11, 2007, 9:57 pm

> Or, a thicker plywood roof and shorter nails.
>
>> on 11/10/2007 2:08 PM Craig M said the following:
>>> Or how about using metal roofing, couple sheets of barn type tin would
>>> make a nice roof
>>>
>> Or aluminum sheets sold in rolls for flashing. Available at HD, Lowes, or
>> other hardware stores
>>
>>>
>>>> I am making a rabbit hutch for a friend and to avoid nails through the
>>>> plywood roof, I was thinking of using roofing cement to adhere the 3
>>>> tab shingles to the wood instead of nails.
>>>>
>>>> Will the roofing cement suffice in windy/stormy weather once it has
>>>> dried/cured? This is not a high tech/demanding project, just want
>>>> something trouble free.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>> --
>>
>> Bill
>> In Hamptonburgh, NY
>> To email, remove the double zeroes after @
>
>
Sounds to me like a good application for a heavy duty stapler with staples
of a suitable length.

Don Young



Posted by RF on November 13, 2007, 7:00 pm
Don Young wrote:
>> Or, a thicker plywood roof and shorter nails.
>>
>>> on 11/10/2007 2:08 PM Craig M said the following:
>>>> Or how about using metal roofing, couple sheets of barn type tin would
>>>> make a nice roof
>>>>
>>> Or aluminum sheets sold in rolls for flashing. Available at HD, Lowes, or
>>> other hardware stores
>>>
>>>>
>>>>> I am making a rabbit hutch for a friend and to avoid nails through the
>>>>> plywood roof, I was thinking of using roofing cement to adhere the 3
>>>>> tab shingles to the wood instead of nails.
>>>>>
>>>>> Will the roofing cement suffice in windy/stormy weather once it has
>>>>> dried/cured? This is not a high tech/demanding project, just want
>>>>> something trouble free.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>> --
>>>
>>> Bill
>>> In Hamptonburgh, NY
>>> To email, remove the double zeroes after @
>>
> Sounds to me like a good application for a heavy duty stapler with staples
> of a suitable length.
>
> Don Young
>
>

Roofing cement is the way to go. It is typically a black tarry stuff and
works very well.
I used it on a real house a few years ago and not a shingle has blown
off despite several storms.
No staples, thank you.

RF

Posted by on November 14, 2007, 10:54 am
> Don Young wrote:
> >> Or, a thicker plywood roof and shorter nails.
>
> >>> on 11/10/2007 2:08 PM Craig M said the following:
> >>>> Or how about using metal roofing, couple sheets of barn type tin would
> >>>> make a nice roof
>
> >>> Or aluminum sheets sold in rolls for flashing. Available at HD, Lowes, or
> >>> other hardware stores
>
>
> >>>>> I am making a rabbit hutch for a friend and to avoid nails through the
> >>>>> plywood roof, I was thinking of using roofing cement to adhere the 3
> >>>>> tab shingles to the wood instead of nails.
>
> >>>>> Will the roofing cement suffice in windy/stormy weather once it has
> >>>>> dried/cured? This is not a high tech/demanding project, just want
> >>>>> something trouble free.
>
> >>> --
>
> >>> Bill
> >>> In Hamptonburgh, NY
> >>> To email, remove the double zeroes after @
>
> > Sounds to me like a good application for a heavy duty stapler with staples
> > of a suitable length.
>
> > Don Young
>
> Roofing cement is the way to go. It is typically a black tarry stuff and
> works very well.
> I used it on a real house a few years ago and not a shingle has blown
> off despite several storms.
> No staples, thank you.
>
> RF

OK, I did it with roofing cement. The metal roof would have been an
alternative, but i had a bunch of shingles already. I cemented them
all down and let it sit for a week. Then I loaded it in the back of
my truck with the bottoms of the shingles facing into the wind driving
(it was above my rooftop of the cab). They stayed on at 55MPH for 5
miles, so I think they will hold OK! Thanks for the replies.


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