Set the top of a shingle level with this line and mark the bottom for the angle of the roof.
Roof shingles against wall.
And in our experience when a single piece of flashing extends only a few inches under the shingles especially on a long roof slope and worse on a roof that happens to slope slightly towards rather than away from the abutting vertical building wall the accumulated roof drainage water near the bottom end of the roof wall intersection will overwhelm the width of the flashing and because it.
Cut the bottom to that angle and nail the shingle in place butted up against the edge of the front wall shingle.
The wall portion of the flashing should be flush against the exterior wall and the shingle portion of the flashing should be on top of the porch roof shingles.
The flat roofing material must go up the wall a minimum of 12 or up the wall and over the top of the wall if the wall is less than 12 high.
Bent into an l shape.
If there were no flashing against these walls water could slowly drip into the crevice between the wall and the roof and potentially into the home.
Posted march 4 2017 filed under roof installation roof repair maintenance.
Place one shingle against the wall with the wider bottom edge aligned with the bottom edge of the wall.
Snap a horizontal chalk line about shingle height on the side walls where the roof intersections slope.
Damaged or improperly installed roof flashing especially around the chimney or dormer is one of the most common causes of roof leaks.
How to install roof flashing against a wall.
Flashing is installed to surround roof features such as vents.
Galvanized sheet metal bent at a 90 degree angle i e.
This flashing is typically field fabricated from a sheet of 26 ga.
This how to video explores proper roof flashing installation for shingle roofing applications.
Drive two type 316 stainless steel nails through the shingle and into the wall with a hammer.
Step 8 nail the flashing into place using galvanized roofing nails.
Keep the nails as close to the edges of the flashing as possible.
It is not uncommon especially in two story and side split houses to have a roof that butts against a wall as shown in figure 1.