News0 min ago
Dry Verge its the bain of my life
2 Answers
About 2 years ago I had our house re-roofed as part of an extension, and I was advised by the roofer that dry verge was the way to go. Since then I have suffered with drips from the dry verge systerm hittng the window ledges keeping me awake at night and also dampening the brickwork, not only this but when you go into the loft the is a draft from the gable end because the isn't any form of seal to the outside world.
Is there anything I can do about this I have given up on the original installer I have accepted the fact I will not get any joy out of him.
If I remove the dry verge system can I seal up the void space between the batons/under felt and the wall with morter/expanding foam???
Is there anything I can do about this I have given up on the original installer I have accepted the fact I will not get any joy out of him.
If I remove the dry verge system can I seal up the void space between the batons/under felt and the wall with morter/expanding foam???
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Broadie451. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I think you were 'sold' a solution to a problem that didn't exist. As the attached link Q&A makes clear, these things have to be specifically designed for the tile system used - yours may have been since you said it was part of a complete reroof and not a simple retrofit.
http://uk.answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid =20061025085313AAcWh5Z
I guess the answer to your question about using mortar is that it depends on the size of the gap that now exists - mortar has traditionally been the way such verges have been sealed.
Without seeing, it is a bit hard to know.
http://uk.answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid =20061025085313AAcWh5Z
I guess the answer to your question about using mortar is that it depends on the size of the gap that now exists - mortar has traditionally been the way such verges have been sealed.
Without seeing, it is a bit hard to know.