Thanks for the replies chaps. All cladding safely off and stored.
Balbus":1jyt5v3m said:
Isn't that why god gave us stainless screws?
Nah, they'd look awful.
jasonB":1jyt5v3m said:
Is it feather edge or square edge boarding? You will always get some splits with green oak, the sunny weather of the last few days won't have helped.
Yes it's feather edged. My parents boards (from the same supplier) have very few cracks.
Are you using stainless or plated nails, basic lostheads will leave big black stains around the fixings.
They're galvanised lost heads. I've got black marks where the drill has touched the oak, but I understand the black fades with time.
The Bear":1jyt5v3m said:
Sounds like part of your problem is the way it was nailed.
No kidding!
It should be nailed at the bottom of the board only. BUT high enough up so it doesn't go through the top of the board underneith.
Yes, if only I'd have known that before it went up.
The tops (either barge board or facia) were a bit of a pain, but once they were off the rest came off by prizing off from behind. I've lost a few tiny boards, and have the odd crack in a couple of big boards, but nothing too bad yet. May just need 1 or 2 replacement boards, nothing more (unless some hairline cracks turn bad now it's off). Took 9 hours, with help for the first 5 hours, but it least it looks like it's going to be ok. It'll be fast putting back up, since everything is cut to length etc.
Some of the lost heads pulled through the oak, but most stayed with the planks. When re-cladding, I intend to use the same nail holes, but where the nail goes through the board underneath, cut a little 'v' to prevent the original problem. Where the nails pulled through the oak, what do you guys advise I do when re-nailing - put the nail through at a different angle, use a round head, or will the lost heads still grip enough, even though they've been pulled through once?
Thanks