I figured that I'd get some of that roofing tarpaper, use the flashing
cement to attach it to the wood, and put some shingles on it. However
I can only buy the tarpaper in large rolls, which is far more than I
would ever need.
So, what's a good way to waterproof a pet house?
>Do you have any place to get some used or scrap sheet tin? Just cover
>the roof with tin, and it will never leak again. Otherwise, see if
>some roofer or anyone has some left over shingles, and just nail them
>on as per the instructions on the package.
>
>
>
I can just buy some shingles but I thought that I needed to paper it
first. It's a (3 foot square) flat roof.
Call a local roofer or 2 and ask them if you can stop by their next
job (or 2) and grab the cut-offs/leftovers of roofing felt. They often
have short lengths that aren't worth their time to lay down.
I don't know that I'd use flashing cement...I just staple it down.
I bought open bundles of shingles at Lowes for $10 a bundle. Roofed a
8 x 10 shed for under $50 bucks!
I once built a 2 room dog house with a removable roof to make cleaning
it easier. I figured I'd shingle the roof to make it last. Damn roof
was so heavy it took two of us to remove it when we wanted to clean.
Dog never did like the house much anyway.
Is the roof sloped? I'm wondering why it leaks, when my doghouse,
with similar construction, does not. The doghouse roof is one piece of
painted plywood that is sloped just enough to shed water and overlaps
the walls about 2 or 3 inches all around, and the house stays dry.
Does it have a floor? Maybe the water is coming in at the bottom
somehow? All that being said, as others have said see if you can beg
a scrap of tarpaper, or just put the shingles on without it. If it's
close enough to the house, you can test it with the hose. -- H
If you're unwilling to use tar paper, how about actual tar, and then
put down shingles? Easy, way cheap.
Oh, and if you're REALLY cheap, how about a $5 tarp from the BORG?
1st thing. Tilt it or something to get rid of the flat roof.
You could try a deck stain on it.
Tar paper alone would do it for a year or 2.
A scrap of roll roofing would do better. Shingle won't work on a roof with
insuficient slope.
Blue tarp? Or maybe green tarp? Larger than the cathouse. Nail or
staple along the side, use a razor knife to cut the tarp to shape.
--
Christopher A. Young
Learn more about Jesus
www.lds.org
.
"dgk" <d...@somewhere.com> wrote in message
news:ekd9b616hqhetjbtj...@4ax.com...
I built one back when I was a kid, same problem. I used old window
shades that I pulled off the rollers, then stapled onto the roof and
walls of the house. You could do the same with an inexpensive plastic
tarp.
It might be easier to redesign the project. Consider using concrete
blocks for walls, plus a sloping piece of Ondura roofing. Anchor
together any way convenient and it should last for years. And zero
maintenance.
Joe
The OP said it had a flat roof, in his second posting, very bad design
to start with.
>The roof needs some slope (others have mentioned).
>
>Blue tarp? Or maybe green tarp? Larger than the cathouse. Nail or
>staple along the side, use a razor knife to cut the tarp to shape.
That's likey what I'm going to do. Probably brown to blend in with the
location. Staple it. It doesn't get much easier than that.
The problem is that the OP (me) is incompetent at cutting boards at
other than a right angle, likely because I don't have the equiptment
to do so. I can get the plywood cut at Home Despot but only right
angles. Damn, an old friend's father had a whole woodworking setup in
his basement and could have done this stuff blindfolded. He died a few
years back and my friend rented a truck and took all the machines
cross country and put them into his basement. Maybe if I drew up some
plans I could get him to...
Come to think of it, my roof is pretty much a flat roof and yes, it is
a pain every five years or so. I can't wrap the whole house in a tarp
though. Actually, after those tornadoes just tore through New York
City a few weeks back, lots of homes near me are covered in blue tarp.
>On Wed, 13 Oct 2010 18:43:00 -0700 (PDT), "hr(bob) hof...@att.net"
><hrho...@att.net> wrote:
>
>>> walls of the house. You could do the same with an inexpensive plastic
>>> tarp.
>>
>>The OP said it had a flat roof, in his second posting, very bad design
>>to start with.
>
>Thats weird, I never got that second posting.
>
>He can only use tin. Get some barn siding tin and use neoprene washer
>screws to afix it. That stuff is sold 38" wide (36" coverage). I
>recall he said the roof is 3 feet. This stuff sells for about $2.50 a
>running foot. That roof should cost $10 with the screws. A rural
>lumberyard may have a bent or dented sheet with a usable portion of
>the sheet remaining.
Worth a check, I'll check the local lumber yards.
A local guy is doing a workshop on Saturday on how to create a feral
cat house out of styrofoam fish boxes. They only last a year but are
supposed to be warmer than wood and far easier to deal with. Of
course, they need to be screwed onto a wood base or they blow away.
So I got to thinking about just getting one of those 4'*8' foam boards
from Home Despot and slapping one together. But if the tarp works on
the wood then it's even easier.
To be honest, I'd say find a big ol' fridge at a junkyard (or via
freecycle) and cut down one of the flat side panels.
Or put an angled roof on the thing...
--
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
DanG
Keep the whole world singing . . .
"dgk" <d...@somewhere.com> wrote in message
news:ekd9b616hqhetjbtj...@4ax.com...
re: "The problem is that the OP (me) is incompetent at cutting boards
at other than a right angle, likely because I don't have the
equiptment to do so"
I'm not sure what equipment you have, but what are you using that
limits you to cutting boards at right angles?
A circular saw, sabre saw, hand saw, heck, even a reciprocating saw
can follow a straight edge placed at an angle.
What is it that limits you to cutting right angles only?
I think OP paid to have HD cut all the boards on their panel saw, and
doesn't have ANY saw to use at all. For crap like a cat house, a 20-buck
saw from HF will be more than enough.
--
aem sends...
I have a hand held metal contraption in which a rotating blade perhaps
8" in diameter projects below a level surface and cuts anything it
hits. While I suppose it is possible to hold it at an angle while
cutting a piece of wood, it is unlikely that such a cut would be
regular enough to match a similarly cut surface.
I think at a minumum I would need a table saw that can be held at a
consistent angle.