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-   -   Snow guards (http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=28467)

zippyt 12-30-2012 05:42 PM

Snow guards
 
2 Attachment(s)
Has Any body seen or had any experience with something like this type of snow guards ??

How do you folks Up north deal with snow and ice accumlation on metal roofs ??

Zippyt wants , no needs to know !!!



http://snoblox.com/index.php?l=page_...nobar_products

also

http://www.alaskanproductsonline.com/order.html

because we are getting this mess

Griff 12-30-2012 06:48 PM

Sorry dude, I've got a 12/12 pitch and heavy insulation so no ice on my roof.

orthodoc 12-30-2012 08:51 PM

Ice at the edge of your roof means there's a problem with the insulation. You don't want ice dams there - water backs up into your attic, and they're dangerous for anyone walking under the eaves.

In heavy snow areas we either pitch the roof steeply or shovel it regularly; sometimes both.

glatt 12-31-2012 07:27 AM

I've seen stuff like that over the doorway of some places. I don't see the need for it anywhere else. Just let the snow slide off and onto the ground. Nobody will be standing there. Besides, how often do you have this problem where you are?

I have no personal experience as our roof is regular asphalt shingles.

DanaC 12-31-2012 07:43 AM

This what sprang to my mind when I read t he thread title:

http://i.newsarama.com/images/doctor...he-snowmen.jpg

BigV 12-31-2012 10:07 AM

I've only watched a little bit of your video zip. Here's what's happening on your roof though. Snow falls on the whole roof. Since there's a slope, anything on the roof will move from the peak to the eave, snow and liquid water alike. Since the snow moves more slowly, it's not so much of a problem. However, your roof is not equally warm. This is KEY.

The area of your roof near the peak is warmer, but at the eaves, especially near the area of the roof that does not have house under it, the roof is much colder. What happens is when it gets just warm enough to melt over the greater area of the roof, but still cold outside, the snow melts, now liquid water drains down your roof toward your eave where it is much colder (no warm cozy house/attic heating it from beneath). Cold but liquid water hits cold roof, it freezes. Now you have ice at the eaves. This process continues to repeat until the ice dam gets too heavy to stay on the roof and it falls off, hopefully safely, but not always, or it just gets warm enough to melt everything. Either way, having that much water in that location on your roof is a bad idea.

the two products I saw in your links seemed to talk about mitigating this process, but were PRIMARILY concerned with preventing an avalanche of the snow from the peak to the eave by giving the snow some traction, either with one bar at the bottom or with several bars from eave to peak. The pics you show DO have some avalanche risk, but I see a bigger risk from the ice dam. You need to get that ice off of there before you have a big-GER problem, and maybe a *serious* injury.

Clearly no product you see on the internet or whereever will help you NOW, you have snow and ice on your roof NOW. This can't help you now. These products are to be installed on a clear roof, and work on subsequent winter accumulations. I'd work on getting that ice off. Hammers, picks, heat, something.

In Alaska, when I worked for an outfit that had hotels up there, ice dams on standing seam metal roofs were a real known hazard. I know that for major entryways, the roof was built in a different way so that traffic patterns didn't intersect with the low water point/ice dam location. You don't have that option, you walk right under that nearly horizontal gutter to get to your front door. Another option was to put strip heaters over areas where ice dams were a hazard, kind of like the pipe heaters you get in a strip and wind around a pipe, y'know. That COULD BE a potential help to keep an ice dam from forming in a very specific place, like in front of the walkways. I imagine you could even install this now, after beating that ice away, of course.

I'll keep thinking about this, but you really need to get that ice off of the gutters. That shit is heavy, you'll be LUCKY if the worst that happens is that it tears the gutters off your house.

xoxoxoBruce 01-02-2013 10:46 AM

I don't think Zip's pictures look like an ice dam problem. Looks to me like the entire roof sheet is slowly migrating down the roof. Ice dams typically build up huge hunks of ice at the eaves, then grow big icicles, not extend/curl out from the edge. :confused:

ZenGum 01-03-2013 04:52 AM

So it's a goddamn glacier, then?

Oh by the way it's going to be 44 degrees here tomorrow.

Centigrade.

zippyt 01-03-2013 03:42 PM

Yeah but that heat brings out the venomous snakes and Huge Spiders ;)

footfootfoot 01-06-2013 02:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by orthodoc (Post 845765)
Ice at the edge of your roof means there's a problem with the insulation. You don't want ice dams there - water backs up into your attic, and they're dangerous for anyone walking under the eaves.

In heavy snow areas we either pitch the roof steeply or shovel it regularly; sometimes both.

At first I was all, like, how does she know that kind of stuff? Then I was all, like, Oh yeah, she grew up in, like, Baffin Bay or something.


Yeah, Zippy, if you plan on getting snowed on a lot down there because of global warming changing the climate and shit, you're gonna need to insulate the crap out of your attic. Remember to vent it too. You could also let it be a "Cold" attic and just insulate the attic floor/ living area ceiling.

Where we are, 1) no one in their right mind has gutters because the snow and ice just rip them off, and 2) Houses that are well insulated or have cold attics have snow piled up on them without icicles.

You might want to invest in some sled dogs though, I bet Ortho can hook you up.

zippyt 01-06-2013 03:37 PM

Our roof is vented well , ridge vent ( full length at the top )and a louver at both ends , and soffette vents as well
i dont think we are getting ice damns ,
the snow collects and falls off in a day or 2 , nothing seems to stay any longer than that ,
it just ALL goes at once , one big WHHHOOOOMMMPPPP !!!
Im afraid one of us is going to get hurt when it falls

ZenGum 01-06-2013 06:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by zippyt (Post 846275)
Yeah but that heat brings out the venomous snakes and Huge Spiders ;)

Seriously. Snakes can't take very hot temperatures, and so must seek shade and cool places. Like under houses, in sheds, in the carport ... :worried:

xoxoxoBruce 01-08-2013 01:03 AM

1 Attachment(s)
Saw this on reddit. The caption read, "We got a little snow. We have a metal roof".

I just remembered, Boeing has those bars, on the metal roof buildings, over the doorways. They may have helped in the light snows but in the heavy snows they had to block those doors because of falling ice and frozen snow.

orthodoc 01-08-2013 05:35 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by footfootfoot (Post 846711)
At first I was all, like, how does she know that kind of stuff? Then I was all, like, Oh yeah, she grew up in, like, Baffin Bay or something.

Houses that are well insulated or have cold attics have snow piled up on them without icicles.

You might want to invest in some sled dogs though, I bet Ortho can hook you up.

Baffin Bay :lol: close enough. Moosonee was my dog-sled experience, though. But there's more snow farther south - in the Muskoka area it was normal to have 12" fall overnight. Sort of like in upstate New York.

Like foot said, you want the 'deep snow without ice' look on your roof. The deep 'whommpp' sound of the snow sliding and falling is normal; you just don't want it falling on your head. Keep people away from the eaves and if your doors are all threatened, pick one and clear the roof in that area daily (I know, that would be a real pain) or put up baffles to divert the snow away.

glatt 01-08-2013 07:25 AM

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This is currently my aunt's house. It's been in our family for a couple hundred years. When I was a kid, it was the best place I ever found for getting huge icicles. If you look closely at this picture taken the other day, there's one there on the front porch that's about 7 feet long.
Attachment 42393
Clearly it needs some more insulation, but the thing that interests me is that the longest icicles are at the front porch. The space above the front porch is unheated. That whole second story above the front porch, with the three small windows, is unheated attic. And to the right of the windows on the first floor on the actual front porch is an unheated pantry and stairway leading to the attic. So I don't know why it's melting so much. Those windows into the house on the front porch itself go into the heated dining room, but everything around the dining room is unheated.

It's curious to me. I do know it's a very old house with not much insulation, if any. It's really pretty in this picture.


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