Thanks for these videos! Super helpful for the homeowner DIY’er. I’m curious about the tie in of stucco walls with parapets - is the exterior stucco supposed to come up and OVER the top of parapet wall? Or can the stucco terminate at the top of the parapet, with underlayment and torchdown then rolled a few inches over the exterior stucco? I plan on capping parapets with Spanish tile - a typical LA flat roof home.
We use a smaller torch - Detail torch and are just careful in holding the torch in the correct direction. If you want to be extra careful you can always torch then flop.
I'm from Toronto canada the one thing we do differently is we torch a strip of base going half way on the metal flashing to cover the nails then the cap sheet the same way you did so the metal gets 2 ply
I have heard it done that way, and actually have had a conversation with our technical rep about that. I am not sure I see the benefit. The net surface area of torch to metal is the same. They say that if one fails there is a backup ply essentially. I don't really see the point. Would love to hear your feedback.
@@RoofRepairSpecialist the thing is if the nails push up over time, which let's be honest sometimes they do... their heads are hitting the midply and not just instantly trying to poke through your cap sheet
Will it work like this if I install wood stove pipe on a 1/12 pitch roof? The roof has existing torch down bitumen. If I will use a standard chimney kit for cathedral ceiling. It comes with a storm collar rather than a tight seal like this video.
Two questions: 1. Does the poly glass mid ply mfg sell patches, or just rolls? 2. Do you have a link? I am only doing one penetration for my stove pipe, so I don't need a whole roll. I have self-stick underlayment on the plywood and then torch down for the finished surface. Thanks.
I do this on my jobs but in reverse. Flashing on top of base and then a piece of base over the flashing and the cap ontop of that. Water would have to get through 2 layers instead if 1 layer like this
Let me know what other torch down roofing tutorials you would like to see next!
Thanks for these videos! Super helpful for the homeowner DIY’er. I’m curious about the tie in of stucco walls with parapets - is the exterior stucco supposed to come up and OVER the top of parapet wall? Or can the stucco terminate at the top of the parapet, with underlayment and torchdown then rolled a few inches over the exterior stucco? I plan on capping parapets with Spanish tile - a typical LA flat roof home.
Good to have an idea thanks I will keep in touch with you 🙏🙏🙏
Any time
How about a video in the case of you have an existing pipe/flashing, and it is leaking and now you have to patch it.
I like your videos ✌️👍
Thank you, I appreciate it. If you haven’t already always appreciate a subscribe.
What about for an already existing roof and you have to install new vents through it?
I'll be doing a video for this separately. Its pretty much a similar concept you will just install a 2x2 patch
thank you for sharing your knowledge, what do you do when installing the pipe flashing around PVC pipe so that plastic pipe dont gets melted?
We use a smaller torch - Detail torch and are just careful in holding the torch in the correct direction. If you want to be extra careful you can always torch then flop.
I'm from Toronto canada the one thing we do differently is we torch a strip of base going half way on the metal flashing to cover the nails then the cap sheet the same way you did so the metal gets 2 ply
I have heard it done that way, and actually have had a conversation with our technical rep about that. I am not sure I see the benefit. The net surface area of torch to metal is the same. They say that if one fails there is a backup ply essentially. I don't really see the point. Would love to hear your feedback.
@@RoofRepairSpecialist the thing is if the nails push up over time, which let's be honest sometimes they do... their heads are hitting the midply and not just instantly trying to poke through your cap sheet
Will it work like this if I install wood stove pipe on a 1/12 pitch roof? The roof has existing torch down bitumen. If I will use a standard chimney kit for cathedral ceiling. It comes with a storm collar rather than a tight seal like this video.
Definitely, sounds like you have a good plan.
Two questions: 1. Does the poly glass mid ply mfg sell patches, or just rolls? 2. Do you have a link?
I am only doing one penetration for my stove pipe, so I don't need a whole roll. I have self-stick underlayment on the plywood and then torch down for the finished surface. Thanks.
They only sell full rolls. If by any chance you are in the area around Los Angeles, feel free to stop by our yard, I’ll be happy to give you a piece.
@@RoofRepairSpecialist Thank you for the offer! In SD.
I do this on my jobs but in reverse. Flashing on top of base and then a piece of base over the flashing and the cap ontop of that. Water would have to get through 2 layers instead if 1 layer like this
I’ve been contemplating that for a while and been thinking of switching that method. It’s a long conversation but I see the argument both ways.
Why is pipe flashing and electrical mast flashing different?
Its not really different, unless i'm missing something. Electrical mast is a type of pipe.
Wire wheel and no safety glasses not a good idea😢
Point taken
your forgot couple more nails
?