I'm just embarking on my first man-made slate roof, having done a few tiled ones in the past.
I intend to use double-nailing and copper rivets, rather than slate hooks.
The roof has 150mm deep joists with 100mm PIR between the joists. It will have a 50mm cavity between the insulation and the breather membrane, and then 25mm x 50mm battens for the slate. A slate salesman I was talking to said that nowadays they recommend counter-battening so that there's a further 50mm of clear air between the breather membrane and the slates to stop them curling under extreme conditions. This seems OTT to me?
Out of interest... why is it that oversized fibre cement slates only seem to be available as doubles rather than slate-and-a-halfs? Simply a case that they're cheap enough, flat enough, and easy enough to score/snap that it's not worth the bother?
Thanks
Gary
I intend to use double-nailing and copper rivets, rather than slate hooks.
The roof has 150mm deep joists with 100mm PIR between the joists. It will have a 50mm cavity between the insulation and the breather membrane, and then 25mm x 50mm battens for the slate. A slate salesman I was talking to said that nowadays they recommend counter-battening so that there's a further 50mm of clear air between the breather membrane and the slates to stop them curling under extreme conditions. This seems OTT to me?
Out of interest... why is it that oversized fibre cement slates only seem to be available as doubles rather than slate-and-a-halfs? Simply a case that they're cheap enough, flat enough, and easy enough to score/snap that it's not worth the bother?
Thanks
Gary