Eric The Viking
Established Member
- Joined
- 19 Jan 2010
- Messages
- 6,599
- Reaction score
- 76
My knee still hasn't recovered from laying a floor in the attic last Christmas holiday.
It's been soul-destroying this year to have a succession of leaks in the main part of our roof, and this winter has brought two new ones. I sorted all the earlier ones, but these are nastier - the lead flashings round the solar heating pipes are failing. Two have gone so far (worked round one, but can't get to the other), and I expect the remaining six will fail some time in the next few months (they're all welded leadwork, and it's the welds that have failed).
If the others do go, they're higher up the roof and will prejudice my new floor up there. So, apart from checking every time it rains, I need to try to protect the chipboard if I can. On the other hand, I want to retain the ability of the ceilings underneath to breathe, as they're 100+ year-old lath+plaster, so I can't seal the whole thing up completely.
I know I need to take it seriously. There were a couple of leftover T+G pieces under one of the earlier leaks. It took very little water for them to swell up, and although they seem to have dried, they haven't shrunken down again - I fear they won't.
Can anyone suggest some sort of liquid waterproofer I could apply? I'll have to create a space (it's the wood store, among other things!), apply the chemical, then move stuff and repeat. In the summer we're going to get scaffolding up and sort it out properly.
All thoughts appreciated.
E.
It's been soul-destroying this year to have a succession of leaks in the main part of our roof, and this winter has brought two new ones. I sorted all the earlier ones, but these are nastier - the lead flashings round the solar heating pipes are failing. Two have gone so far (worked round one, but can't get to the other), and I expect the remaining six will fail some time in the next few months (they're all welded leadwork, and it's the welds that have failed).
If the others do go, they're higher up the roof and will prejudice my new floor up there. So, apart from checking every time it rains, I need to try to protect the chipboard if I can. On the other hand, I want to retain the ability of the ceilings underneath to breathe, as they're 100+ year-old lath+plaster, so I can't seal the whole thing up completely.
I know I need to take it seriously. There were a couple of leftover T+G pieces under one of the earlier leaks. It took very little water for them to swell up, and although they seem to have dried, they haven't shrunken down again - I fear they won't.
Can anyone suggest some sort of liquid waterproofer I could apply? I'll have to create a space (it's the wood store, among other things!), apply the chemical, then move stuff and repeat. In the summer we're going to get scaffolding up and sort it out properly.
All thoughts appreciated.
E.