Hudson Carpentry
Established Member
Hello all,
I know it's been a while. I am building a log cabin, well a timber framed summer house/man cave thing that will have log lap on (maybe weany edge cladding). I'm at the stage where I'm ready to put a roof on.
My first thought was felt tiles but I have since decided to go for sequoia redwood shingles. I have already boarded the roof with osb and wish for many reasons to keep it. My way of thinking was boards, breathable membrane, battens then shingles. After searching for bronze silicon nails I have since read that maybe I'm going overkill.
So my question is, do I really need the membrane and do I really need the battens? Apprantly these shingles don't need to vent between them and the osb.
I have done a fancy spliced wedged ridge joint and wish the beams be visible, so there is no insulation or internal roof cladding going up. To my thinking this kind of takes a need for a breathable membrane away?
Thanks
Sent from my SM-N910F using Tapatalk
I know it's been a while. I am building a log cabin, well a timber framed summer house/man cave thing that will have log lap on (maybe weany edge cladding). I'm at the stage where I'm ready to put a roof on.
My first thought was felt tiles but I have since decided to go for sequoia redwood shingles. I have already boarded the roof with osb and wish for many reasons to keep it. My way of thinking was boards, breathable membrane, battens then shingles. After searching for bronze silicon nails I have since read that maybe I'm going overkill.
So my question is, do I really need the membrane and do I really need the battens? Apprantly these shingles don't need to vent between them and the osb.
I have done a fancy spliced wedged ridge joint and wish the beams be visible, so there is no insulation or internal roof cladding going up. To my thinking this kind of takes a need for a breathable membrane away?
Thanks
Sent from my SM-N910F using Tapatalk