Install Asphalt Shingles

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Installing new shingles yourself can save considerable time and money, and you can follow the same steps they do to achieve the same professional look. Re-doing the shingles on your roof can help keep your house in good shape, keeping your family safe and protected from the elements. Learn to prepare the roof for shingles, lay even courses, and install your ridge shingles like the experts do.

Steps

Preparing the Roof

  1. Get the right number of shingles for the job. It generally takes three bundles of shingles to cover 100 square feet (9.29 square meters). Asphalt shingle "bundles" are actually sealed in packages (the term bundle comes from wooden shingles which actually came tied up with wire in bundles). Measure your roof and buy appropriately.
    • Measure the length and width of the individual sections of the roof, multiplying them together to determine the area. Add the areas of each section together, then divide by 100 to get the correct number of squares. Multiply this number by 3 to get the number of bundles you'll need to buy.
  2. Measure the length of a shingle as it lies across the roof. This will help determine how the shingles will lay on the roof width. Most asphalt shingles are 3 feet (91.4 centimeters) in length. If your roof's width is not an even multiple of the shingle's length, you will have a partial piece on one end of each row.
    • The bottom row of shingles must hang past the edge of the roof. For a wood shingle roof you would have to cut the shingles that go on the edge to create a straight line to accommodate this.
  3. Remove old shingles and flashing. Start removing the shingles at the peak farthest from the trash container, or the corner you want to collect the shingles in. Use a garden fork or a roofing shovel to pull them off quickly, use the hammer-method and go by hand for a more thorough job.
    • Pry up the nails and loosening the ridge caps. It's ok if you don't get all the nails at first, because you'll have a chance to go back through and remove them later.
    • Remove the metal flashing around chimneys, vents, and valleys in the roof. Flashing in the valleys will almost always be trashed, especially. Some roofers will keep some of the flashing that's in good shape, but it's probably worth junking it all when you've got the chance.
  4. Clean the roof. Sweep the roof as clean as possible. Remove nails that didn't come up earlier. Reattach loose boards in the sheathing. Examine the sheathing for damage and rotted boards, replacing the damaged sections.[1]
  5. Install underlayment and new flashing. Lay asphalt, felt-paper, or special waterproof underlayment, over the roof. Some roofers will use 15-pound (6.8 kg) roofing paper, which is an effective method. Be generous with the staples while attaching the paper to the roof deck. Use "tin caps" under staples, if the roof may be exposed to wind before shingles are to be applied.
    • Use sticky back ice and water shield as underlayment where ice dams or leaf and twig dams are likely to build up, and at valleys and where the roof ends at a wall (wide metal flashing may also be used there).
    • Install new flashing. Nail metal flashing called "drip edge" along the outer edges of the roof deck.
  6. Choose the kind of starter course you will use. You can use narrow tab-less starter shingles if you bought some (GAF Pro-Start is one such brand), or will be cutting your own starter shingles to fit the particular project. Some people like to only have to buy one variety of shingle and cut them to fit, while others prefer the ease of the pre-cut starter shingles without tabs.
  7. Use chalk lines to make a guide for yourself. Depending on the type of shingles you're using and the roof you're working on, you may need to marking a chalk guideline beginning 7 inches (17.8cm) from the bottom roof edge. In either case the glue strip of the starter course is then placed along the drip edge, and at the rake edges as well.[2]
    • Mark from the left to right edge of the roof so the chalk line will be seen immediately above each course as a guideline. Continue to chalk additional guidelines based on the width of the shingle through at least four courses (rows) across the roof.

Installing Three-Tab Shingles

  1. Cut your starter-course shingles if necessary. If you are making your own starter shingles, cut the tabs off for the "starter course" (bottom row) of shingles. To prepare the tabs and lay the starter course, shorten the first starter shingle by 6 inches (or about a half of one tab).[3] Place the glue strip at and all along the drip edge, and the rake edges as well. You will shingle over this starter course, so the bottom course will be double thickness.
    • Instead of cutting off all three tabs, you can also reverse the shingles for a starter course, so that the entire shingle with tabs turned upward are under your first course of shingles. With either method, putting the solid edge at the drip edge and cutting 6 inches off the length of first starter shingle prevents the slots between the tabs from lining up with the first regular course laid over the starter, thus not to expose the asphalt roofing paper through the slots of that bottom row.
    • Nail the shingles with no tabs, such as precut Pro-Start shingles,[4] and apply asphalt cement from a caulk gun in many dots along the drip edge under the edge, then press the tab-less shingles down onto the line of asphalt cement dots with adequate spaces between the dots. A continuous bead of asphalt could trap condensation or windblown water under the roofing at some point.
  2. Cut five different lengths for staggering slots. To make sure you've got the right sizes to lay courses correctly, cut several sizes of shingles from the three-tab variety you purchased. Cut off one-half tab-width of the first tab to start the first course. Each cut is needed to shift the slots of the shingles on the course of shingles a 1/2 tab from aligning with the slots in shingles above and below. Keep all scrap, especially any single tabs for use on the ridge cap shingles. Make the following cuts:
    • Cut a half tab off for your first course shingles,
    • Cut off a full tab for your second course shingles
    • Cut one and a half tabs off of your third course shingles,
    • Cut two tabs off your fourth course shingles
    • For your fifth course, cut off half of the final tab
    • Keep your sixth course tabs intact
  3. Start laying courses. Nail the "cut off shingle" into place, about 6 inches from its lower edge. Hammer in one nail about 2 inches from each end of each shingle and another nail about 1 inch above each cutout.
    • The next shingles above should cover the nails by about 1 inch vertically. Horizontally, end nails will be covered by up to about 1/2 of a tab, of the shingle(s) above. Be sure that these nails will hold the top edge of the course of shingles immediately below.
  4. Butt a full shingle up against the cut shingle and nail into place. Repeat this basic pattern, alternating shingles across the roof, working toward the right side, using the chalk line to keep the shingles straight horizontally.
    • Use 4 nails per shingle and 6 nails on the prevailing windward sides of the roof, as wind resistance nailing. Some local codes require the 6 nails on all sides.
  5. Cut the last shingle to the size you need when you reach the end of the row. You can let the excess extend off the side end of the roof and trim it down after it is nailed on, if you like. Continue this process to the 5th row, then begin the same process as the first row beginning with a full shingle, and a chalk mark. Repeat all of the way to the ridge.
    • If it is a hip roof, allow about a tab width to overhang onto the next section of roof at the hip to help strengthen the joint there.

Installing Ridge Shingles

  1. Install the last course. Bend the last course of shingles over the ridge, up to about 6 inches, and nail it onto the other side so that the roofing extends over the top of the ridge, where nails will be covered, leaving no exposed nails.
    • Bend single tabs (or special ridge shingles) over the ridge, beginning at the end putting a bead of asphalt under the first ridge shingle to hold down the tab. Nail it where the next ridge shingle will cover the nails about an inch horizontally and vertically.
  2. Install the ridge shingles. With the asphalt granules exposed, across to the other end, nail the shingles on both sides of the ridge as before. Cut off the asphalt nail line from a ridge shingle when you get to the other end.
  3. Apply a heavy bead of asphalt cement. Dot the cement under and around the edge of the last ridge shingle where you removed the nail line. Nail at the four corners to the end of the ridge.
    • Also apply asphalt cement over the nail heads exposed on the last ridge shingle to prevent water leaks.

Video

Tips

  • Before you begin to install the asphalt shingles, spread the bundles of shingles out over the roof so work will flow continuously.
  • The roofing "felt" paper is asphalt impregnated material that acts as additional waterproofing.
  • There is a smaller dashed line of stick down spots which is not ever covered by plastic tape that helps at the edge of shingles, but the main sticky strip is 2 or 3 times bigger, thus stronger and always needs to be uncovered!
  • Some experts will tell you to begin in the middle in a pyramid and work both ways (which allows two shingling workers to work on that same section) to achieve a more balanced look. Either way is fine.
  • There are also "non-tabbed" shingle (with laminated layers for a simulated wood shingle look) that are, obviously, not "3 tab" but still require cutting to 5 different lengths for staggering the slots.

Warnings

  • Hot weather damage: Do not attempt to install asphalt shingles and walk, crawl or stand on them during really hot weather. This could cause damage to the shingles. One can work half day starting early.
  • On steep roofs, toe-steps should be nailed to the roof with metal strips holding the toe-steps, to keep you and supplies in place -- as well as using safety ropes and a harness.

Things You'll Need

  • Roof hammers
  • Hammer tack/stapler
  • Chalk box
  • Speed square or framing square
  • Caulking gun
  • Ladders and/or scaffolding
  • Air compressor
  • Pneumatic coil roofing nail gun
  • 5/8-inch (1.6 cm) tacks/staples
  • 1-inch (2.5 cm) minimum roofing nails
  • Tubes of asphalt cement
  • 15-pound (6.8 kg) asphalt roofing paper
  • Metal flashing or preformed drip molding for edges
  • Enough 3- or 4-tab asphalt shingle bundles to complete the roof
  • Premade asphalt ridge shingles

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Sources and Citations