okpermanent Posted January 25, 2023 Report Share Posted January 25, 2023 Hi, About two years ago we decided to get a new roof put in, as the previous roof was pretty old and had several tiles broken, while it wasn’t leaking we decided to take a preventative measure and just get it done. We own a detached house with straight pitch roof towards back and front of the house, the roof is a modern dry ridge ridge roof with a membrane. About a year later, our roof started leaking around the ridge side where the chimneys were. we took some photos called the roofer and got him to come and have a look, he looked at it, sent a message a couple days later that after inspection there was nothing wrong with it. And its wasnt the roof fault. We spent a few months trying him to return our calls with no result, eventually we got a couple roofers to come out and we end up going for the cheaper route. These roofers said that dry ridges tend to leak and they would fit a sealant (which i found out was just silicone eventually) alongside the top of roof and the ridges, as soon they left the leak continued. i called them a couple more times, while they came out each time to look at it their solution was just to throw more silicone at this. Eventually i got another roofer recommended which fixed several roofs of people i knew, and he got in the roof while it was raining slightly and there was damp, moved some tiles and said, the roof membrane was dry, but the chimneys were full of damp. (Even though the leak started before the chimney breast). He suggested lowering the stacks, checking all the ridges to make sure it was fine, remove all the old cement and repoint the chimneys (there are two chimneys alongside this wall which were closed off) as soon he finished the job it rained a few days later and the leaked appeared as it always did. The roofer came promptly and said the roof was dry alongside the ridge but the top gabel on the wall had a damp, he said he redone all the membrane that goes there and suggested if doesnt work to fit a wet gable. It hasnt rained since, and while i am not a professional i am struggling to understand if a wet gable should be fit with a dry system? How should the membrane be fitted alongside a dry ridge? So that the water doesn’t run alongside the wall into my attic? Is the last roofer correct to suggest a wet gabel is the way forward if the leak persists? Many thanks and apologies for the long post, i am just getting really desperate as I don’t know what else to do Attachments 429BD6EA-E89C-4938-A6F8-B5C0DC5F2B62.jpeg 147 KB · Views: 70 D367391C-B72C-4E6C-8BBD-C5941A7DA606.jpeg 302.4 KB · Views: 73 185D0ABF-99C1-4745-9A63-123B4EDCD235.jpeg 341.2 KB · Views: 69 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
okpermanent Posted January 25, 2023 Author Report Share Posted January 25, 2023 Just now, okpermanent said: Hi, About two years ago we decided to get a new roof put in, as the previous roof was pretty old and had several tiles broken, while it wasn’t leaking we decided to take a preventative measure and just get it done. We own a detached house with straight pitch roof towards back and front of the house, the roof is a modern dry ridge ridge roof with a membrane. About a year later, our roof started leaking around the ridge side where the chimneys were. we took some photos called the roofer and got him to come and have a look, he looked at it, sent a message a couple days later that after inspection there was nothing wrong with it. And its wasnt the roof fault. We spent a few months trying him to return our calls with no result, eventually we got a couple roofers to come out and we end up going for the cheaper route. These roofers said that dry ridges tend to leak and they would fit a sealant (which i found out was just silicone eventually) alongside the top of roof and the ridges, as soon they left the leak continued. i called them a couple more times, while they came out each time to look at it their solution was just to throw more silicone at this. Eventually i got another roofer recommended which fixed several roofs of people i knew, and he got in the roof while it was raining slightly and there was damp, moved some tiles and said, the roof membrane was dry, but the chimneys were full of damp. (Even though the leak started before the chimney breast). He suggested lowering the stacks, checking all the ridges to make sure it was fine, remove all the old cement and repoint the chimneys (there are two chimneys alongside this wall which were closed off) as soon he finished the job it rained a few days later and the leaked appeared as it always did. The roofer came promptly and said the roof was dry alongside the ridge but the top gabel on the wall had a damp, he said he redone all the membrane that goes there and suggested if doesnt work to fit a wet gable. It hasnt rained since, and while i am not a professional i am struggling to understand if a wet gable should be fit with a dry system? How should the membrane be fitted alongside a dry ridge? So that the water doesn’t run alongside the wall into my attic? Is the last roofer correct to suggest a wet gabel is the way forward if the leak persists? Many thanks and apologies for the long post, i am just getting really desperate as I don’t know what else to do Attachments 429BD6EA-E89C-4938-A6F8-B5C0DC5F2B62.jpeg 147 KB · Views: 70 D367391C-B72C-4E6C-8BBD-C5941A7DA606.jpeg 302.4 KB · Views: 73 roofing contractor arlington va 185D0ABF-99C1-4745-9A63-123B4EDCD235.jpeg 341.2 KB · Views: 69 thanks in advance for any help Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Eric - TIA Posted January 25, 2023 Report Share Posted January 25, 2023 Wish I could help but I am not familiar with that type of roof. Where I live all we do is asphalt shingles. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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