Dear Guys,
Thanks for all of the great advice. A couple of points:
1. I will never allow plywood to go down on my roof unless it is true Exterior Grade, B/C, one side sanded, hand picked by me. Yes, its almost $20 per sheet. But Group One is trouble and CDX is total crap.
2. Another guy giving me an estimate also wondered whether or not my roof may only be 3/8ths instead of a true 1/2. I believe I measured it with a caliper and it was just barely below 1/2. It has four distinct veneer layers, so I'm really hoping it is dimensionally 1/2 inch.
3. I have decided to go with architechural shingles because we constantly have high speed sheer winds in this area. I live in the Shenandoah Valley, but right next to the Luray Pass, which cuts eastward through the Blue Ridge Mountains. I think this creates some type of funnel effect, which concentrates the wind blowing from out of the West into a narrow corridor, coming right over my house. About 3 times a years, we have these high wind storms, and the next morning, all of my neighbors and me are out in our yards picking up big sections of three-tab that have just been torn off of our homes. Even people with brand new roofs!
4. My roofer told me that the Architectural shingles, being of different dimensions and thickness, will help to hide the scalloping a little, whereas the flat 3-tabs will accentuate it.
5. I may try to fix some of the scalloping by pushing up and fastening 2x4 cross sections under the scalloped seams, but since the plywood itself is 30 years old dry, I'm not sure that I will have the strength to push them upward and hold them there while I fasten the cross pieces. My brother tells me to put a 2x8 across the bottom chords where I will be standing, and use a car jack (sitting upon it) to "jack-up" the low place while I am working to fasten the cross piece. This sounds pretty dangerous to me, but he swears that roofers use these all of the time.
6. Having worked as a construction laborer for 3 summers while in college, I got very acquainted with the career criminals who worked in the ditches and on the crews. They were not minor sociopaths or committers of petty crimes, but were true career felons, always scheming about how to steal a tractor, or a piece of equipment, or even just a hand tool that was laying about or unguarded. A common phrase was "we'll come back at night and [fill in the blank.]" Most had been in prison for a violent offense, such as assault and battery, even manslaughter. So I agree, I have to be real careful about this.
7. I too worry a bit about the extra weight of architectural shingles, but since it will be the only layer of shingles up there, I am hoping that it won't be an issue. I'm not putting ice guard over the entire roof, but just in a few normal places under the overhangs.
8. The trusses are made of southern yellow pine, but believe me it is not what its cracked up to be. Yellow pine timber is full of large knot-holes, some of which are two-thirds the width of the board itself. I have about 5 cracked or totally broken chords up there now, all stemming from the dried knot holes, which I am repairing or replacing with triple pieces of straight grain, super premium, no-knot-hole, hand-picked white pine 2x4s, all screwed and glued together with the PL 8x premium structure adhesive. You can't even buy yellow pine in 2x4s around here anymore. It's only comes in 2x8 and up.
9. I will NEVER buy a house with pre-fab trusses again. My parents house is 60 years old. The rafters are solid one-piece 2x8 lumber and the decking is 3/4 true exterior grade plywood. It is as solid as concrete and you could land a helicopter on it.
Thanks for all additional comments. I am really worried about all this. I always try to do a totally first rate job on any house repairs. Obviously the best thing would be to have the entire deck ripped off and replaced with new plywood. But, for just the repairs and reroofing I have mentioned, I am already up to $13,000. I'm pretty sure it would top $20,000 to redeck it all. Plus, who knows what extra damage would be done to the trusses by the guys ripping up all of the decking?
My brother hates the way I pour money into my house. His attitude is, "So what if the roof sags a little? SOMEBODY will buy it. You just keep lowering the sale price until they do."
Thanks for all any additional comments.
Mannyrock
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