AJB Temple
Finely figured
I am finally getting round to fitting new guttering to my newish buildings. Obviously I chose a time to do this when summer disappears and we get daily deluges. Today was great - it started with the cats and dogs just as I was fitting my first downpipe and S bend.
I wanted copper, but the price is just crazy. As in triple. The main barn has plastic guttering and it is badly installed and useless. So I have decided to use galvanised steel guttering, downpipes and fittings everywhere. The quality is superb. I went for this range as I like the profile and I can use different sizes for different applications. Steel Gutter - 100mm Galvanised
I have two questions for those of you working in metal. 1) I need to cut holes in the gutter for the water to drop through the clip on hoppers into the downpipe. So far I have only done one and did it with a V cut and then straight tin snips to cut the hole, then hammers the cut edges with a ball pein to tidy it up inside the hopper chute. This works fine but is slow. Is there a better way?
2) A pro roofer on a you tube vid I watched (Robin - a sensible bloke on Skillbuilder I think it was) says the guttering etc should be cut with a hacksaw only, not a powered saw. He reckons power tools heat up the galvanic film and could result in corrosion later. Can that be true?
The product is reckoned to have a very long life and I want to get the installation right as I prefer to do jobs once only. Cutting thin moulded sheet with a hacksaw is not fun. I may have to make a jig or box to hold the stuff steady.
I wanted copper, but the price is just crazy. As in triple. The main barn has plastic guttering and it is badly installed and useless. So I have decided to use galvanised steel guttering, downpipes and fittings everywhere. The quality is superb. I went for this range as I like the profile and I can use different sizes for different applications. Steel Gutter - 100mm Galvanised
I have two questions for those of you working in metal. 1) I need to cut holes in the gutter for the water to drop through the clip on hoppers into the downpipe. So far I have only done one and did it with a V cut and then straight tin snips to cut the hole, then hammers the cut edges with a ball pein to tidy it up inside the hopper chute. This works fine but is slow. Is there a better way?
2) A pro roofer on a you tube vid I watched (Robin - a sensible bloke on Skillbuilder I think it was) says the guttering etc should be cut with a hacksaw only, not a powered saw. He reckons power tools heat up the galvanic film and could result in corrosion later. Can that be true?
The product is reckoned to have a very long life and I want to get the installation right as I prefer to do jobs once only. Cutting thin moulded sheet with a hacksaw is not fun. I may have to make a jig or box to hold the stuff steady.