As a roofing contractor doing business in my hometown for
more than 20 years, I consider it my obligation to give
customers the best value for their money. When their asphalt
shingle roof has reached the end of its life, most people
assume their only option is to strip the roof to bare sheathing
before a new roof can be applied. But unless the sheathing is
extensively damaged or the structure can’t support the
weight of another layer of roofing, a better solution is to
apply a new layer of shingles right over the old one. Done
correctly, a reroof job will look as good and last as long as a
"new" roof, for a lot less money and a lot less hassle.
Advantages of Reroofing
Most building codes allow two layers of organic or fiberglass
asphalt shingles on roofs with a 4/12 pitch or less, and three
layers on steeper roofs. If the structure can support the added
weight, a typical 20-square (2,000-square-foot) reroof will
cost at least $1,000 less than a tear-off job. Labor savings go
beyond demolition: Not having to lay down felt paper saves $10
a square; and site and weather protection, as well as cleanup,
are all reduced if not eliminated.
Disposal costs are lower, too, because we don’t have
to rent a dumpster and we save the $65-per-ton dump fees. We
also save by not having to separate the recyclables. Here in
central New York, asphalt, cardboard, and wood all have to be
tossed into different containers, and in some cases hauled to
different transfer stations. The same is true of flashing, drip
edge, tar buckets, vents, and other scrap metal.
Less liability.
As a
contractor in a highly competitive business, I can’t
claim that a reroof is a lot more profitable than a tear-off
job, but I can say that it’s much less risky. There is no
chance of a dumpster carving up the lawn or scarring the
driveway; there is less risk of property damage from falling
debris or from nails that find their way into homeowners’
car tires. And because bare sheathing is never exposed to the
elements, there is much less chance of weather damage or of an
employee being injured while scrambling around in the rain
trying to get an exposed roof under cover.
Equal quality.
All
shingle manufacturers honor the warranty, whether their
products are used for a reroof or a new roof. If the job is
done correctly, with the new layer of shingles laid flat over
the existing shingles, the old roof cushions the new one and
serves as a secondary barrier should wind or water ever break
through the new shingles.
Evaluating the Job
Because
my company does both tear-off and reroof work, I evaluate each
job to determine which procedure is best. Whenever I’m
called to give a roofing estimate, I always ask the callers to
tell me why they think they need a new roof. Have they noticed
leaks and stains, or is it simply because their neighbors are
replacing their roofs? I also ask about the age and apparent
condition of the roof. If the roof is, say, eight years old, it
probably just needs a repair. If it’s 15 years old and
they’ve noticed loose granules washing off the shingles
or running out of the downspouts, it’s a reroof
candidate. When they tell me what neighborhood they’re
in, I can also make a good guess about how many layers of
shingles are already on the roof.
When I arrive to inspect the site, the first thing I look at
is not the roof but the condition of the house and the quality
of any recent work that might have been done to it. We do high
quality work and we charge more than the average
fly-by-nighter. If a house looks like no one cares, I want to
find out what kind of work the owners are looking for before I
invest a lot of my time.
I always walk the roof. A contractor who only does tear-off
work can figure a job standing on the ground with a tape
measure and a pair of binoculars. Not me. I can’t be sure
that reroofing will work until I’ve thoroughly inspected
every inch of the roof. Sometimes it’s an easy decision:
If I peel the shingles back from the rake edge and count three
or more layers, and if most of the shingles are badly curled,
the permanent step flashing is badly deteriorated, or the deck
feels soft and spongy wherever I step, it needs a tear-off.
Even if the structure can support the added weight, the new
roof won’t last unless it’s laid flat over smooth
shingles, intact flashing, and sound sheathing. Localized
problems, like a few missing shingles or one or two soft spots
in the sheathing — at the mouth of a valley, for example,
or around pipes or at the bottom of the chimney — can be
easily repaired, but beyond that it’s more efficient to
do a complete tear-off. I also rule out reroofing if a careless
prior reshingling has left the roof with a washboard
surface.
If reroofing is warranted, I measure the existing shingles
to determine whether they’re standard (12x36 inches) or
metric (13x39 inches). The new shingles must be the same size
as the old ones or installation will be a nightmare. While
I’m on the roof, I also measure the exposure of the
existing shingle courses and eyeball their horizontal
straightness. If the old roofing is extremely wavy or if the
exposure varies more than 1/4 inch from the standard 5 inches
(55/8 inches for metric shingles), I won’t be able to
follow the existing lines, so I’ll have to allow more
labor time for snapping chalk lines and using gauges to ensure
a first-rate job.
Prep Work
The best thing
about beginning a reroof job is the sound sleep I get the night
before, because I don’t have to worry about everything
that could go wrong between tear-off and dry-in. Even if a
freak thunderstorm should strike without warning, there’s
no need to panic. We just calmly seek shelter until the storm
passes, then get right back to work. Any rainwater that gets
between the new surface and the old will evaporate.
The average reroof requires at least two full pallets of
shingles, which I have delivered a few days before the job
starts. For a nominal additional charge, some of my suppliers
will place the bundles on the roof and scatter them according
to my instructions. When I can’t get rooftop delivery, I
coordinate with the homeowners and give my supplier specific
instructions about where to place the load. I don’t want
the homeowner coming home from work to find 60 bundles of
shingles blocking the garage.
I like to use a five-man crew for reroof jobs: a crew chief,
two roofing mechanics, one laborer, and one laborer-trainee.
While the other guys are unloading, setting up ladders, and
stocking the roof, the crew chief will walk the perimeter of
the house looking for anything fragile that might need to be
moved or protected. He’ll also be on the lookout for
pre-existing damage that the homeowners might not have noticed.
If he finds a loose railing or a cracked basement window,
he’ll let them know about it so we don’t take the
blame later on.
Because we’re not doing major demolition, we
don’t have to take the elaborate site-protection measures
I insist on when we do tear-offs. We will, however, lay plywood
over air conditioning units and over any flat stepping stones
that might get scratched. We’ve also learned the hard way
to always protect expensive plants with a plywood tent, and to
lay sheets of cardboard under any of our vehicles parked in the
driveway to catch oil leaks.
After the roof is stocked, the laborers pry up several
layers of cap shingles at a time and toss them into plastic
trash bins (see Figure 1).

Figure
1. The roofing crew uses a Red Ripper roofing demolition
tool to pry up cap shingles, which are collected in a plastic
bin, along with old boot flanges and any loose shingle
tabs.
Sometimes they use a standard gardener’s "potato
fork," but the best tool for the job is a Red Ripper
(Integrated Roofing Technologies, 2413 Stevenage Dr., Unit 11,
Ottawa, Ontario K1G 3W1 800/352-6147). They also pry up and
discard the old vent flanges, and start new boot flanges over
the tops of the pipes. At this point, the prep crew also cuts
out and replaces any bad sheathing, and fills in any missing
shingles with scrap pieces to give the roof a sound, uniform
surface. Finally, they’ll use a hook blade to cut back
the bottom 2 inches from the third course of existing shingles
(12 inches up from the drip edge). This will make starter
course layout easier.
After the messy work is done and the trash bins have been
emptied into the back of the company pickup truck, the roof is
swept clean, then drip edge is scattered along the perimeter of
the roof and nailed in place. We use a special drip edge,
called Overhang Drip (model DE6, Caliber Metals, 23500 John
Gorsuch Dr., Clinton Township, MI 48036; 810/465-7650), which
is made to fit over the old drip edge and shingles (Figure
2).
| Figure
2. Depending on the type of job, the author uses
several specialty drip edge profiles, including one
with an extra-long leg designed to cover existing
shingles and drip edge (at right in top photo). A
single length of drip edge wraps roof corners, with the
rake flashing overlapping the eaves for good drainage
(bottom). |
|
We run the metal along the eaves first, then up the rake
edges, always lapping a higher piece over a lower one for good
drainage.
While this is happening, one of the laborers separates the
bundles of shingles into thirds and scatters them on the roof.
This puts the shingles within easy reach of the shinglers, who
won’t lose time hunting and reaching for fresh material.
The other laborer makes all the precut shingles we’ll
need later: inverts, one- and two-tab shingles, and caps. An
invert is the 5-inch-wide top half of a full shingle; caps are
one-tab shingles with the top corners tapered to ensure the
exposed edges follow a straight line.