11-20-2021, 03:31 PM | #1 |
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Roofing
Back in 2019, I had a thread about a roofing quote, with which we never proceeded. Fast forward to late 2021 and we are looking at starting this up again (inevitably at a higher cost but good to squeeze a couple more years out of the existing roof).
Does anyone have a good source to read up on roofing to be better educated on how to approach estimates, questions to ask, materials to look for / avoid? Yes, I can and will Google, but looking to leverage some others’ experience too. We are in South Florida. The top layer of our roof is concrete roof tile. I don’t particularly care for this material, but it is the most popular in the area - almost every roof in town is the same material. There are some older shingles and wood shake roofs, and a handful of metal panel roofs I have seen, but in our neighborhood it is concrete tiles or metal shaped and finished roof look like concrete roof tiles. Most are barrel shaped but flat tile seems to be getting more popular. Anyway just open ended request for insights to get up to speed and make an intelligent decision. Or at least educated, semi-intelligent decision.
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11-20-2021, 03:49 PM | #2 |
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Can't offer any advice, especially for south Florida, but we just had an appraisal done last week. I was fully expecting the contractor to come back with an estimate to redo the whole roof. Instead he said it had 3-5 more years and he could fix the couple of rough spots for about $800. He also does gutters, so I'm having him tear out the old gutters and install all new 6" wide gutters and high gutter guards. Grand total for all the work is under $3k. I like it when things work out like that.
I don't suppose a thatched roof would work in So. Florida, eh?
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11-20-2021, 03:52 PM | #3 |
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Hurricane-proof would be my #1 consideration in your neighborhood.
If we had to do a new roof here on our current house, I would check to see how close those Tesla solar shingles are to being available. I would also make sure that whatever roof I was considering was compatible with solar panels, which may render architectural aesthetics a moot point.....
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11-20-2021, 04:46 PM | #4 | |
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I read a bit about the Tesla solar shingles and will look more closely at them, but there were two things that concerned me: cost and installation timeline. I read it could take up to six months to complete the install and we just can’t have that going on for six months, particularly with Hurricane season. The concrete tiles support solar panels, as there are a few in my neighborhood that have gone up.
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11-20-2021, 05:13 PM | #5 | |
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Anyways our HOA doesn’t give us any choice but to go with concrete tile. I would have personally gone with shingle or metal. The cost difference between shingle and concrete is huge and from my understanding it’s basically just decorative and offers some protection to the material below which is what actually stops the water. I was also told the flat tiles had better hurricane/wind performance, but we went with barrel style tiles as we just liked the look better and the performance numbers were not that far off. Another thing to consider is wood rot damage. The roofing companies will guesstimate a number for how much wood they will replace, however they don’t actually know until they rip the old one off and see what is rotted underneath. If you don’t have any leaks then maybe it will be minimal, but for us it was significantly higher than what our quote included. Also we were told its good to get tiles from a company that will continue to produce them for many years as if you need to get some replaced down the road you will still be able to buy them. We have some extras stored aways anyways. As for the tesla roof tiles I would look into that carefully as I’m pretty sure they have been sued over those tiles. I think they showed them off and started selling them but no one was actually getting them installed because they either didn’t work or didn’t hold up or something. I believe they started installing regular solar panels on peoples houses instead. I could be wrong though. |
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11-20-2021, 05:19 PM | #6 |
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I own one of the largest Roofing companies in Houston and do ONLY insurance related work.
I can first and foremost say I want to understand your definition of scamming the insurance companies? The 2 largest variables on a home policy are your pipes and roofs, while you being in Florida your rates are roughly similar to Texas due to the storm frequency. The insurance market dictates itself and no "roofer" has the ability to over-bill insurance as the entire system is based on a specific software we all use that has a 6 week rotating pricelist. |
11-20-2021, 05:29 PM | #7 |
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I'll go on the record and say Tesla roofs are very interesting looking and having seem them installed in person you sure as hell better make sure that the home is built true and all sub surface materials such as decking and brackets are square or can result in visual waves in the panels.
Concrete tiles are frankly not all that amazing and even though they're "rated" at a wear rating of 50-100yrs that's the life cycle for degradation yet actual warranties typically are only good for 10yrs due to known thermal fissures that plague Concrete or stone based materials including real slate which is paper thin. Decra is stone coated steel that resemble clay/ boral tires or even a product called matterhorn by CertainTeed is a good option. Regardless when looking at "quotes" price per Square is the name of the game. $800-1200 per sq for tile/ Concrete typically. My recommendation is find a local public adjuster and have them pursue a claim first before spending out of pocket for a roof. I know how to get a $100k roof paid for with only a single damaged tile.... they should aswell. |
11-20-2021, 05:29 PM | #8 |
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If you are going to stay in the house for a long time several decades, just bite the bullet and get a metal roof. You just pay once.
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11-20-2021, 05:35 PM | #9 | |
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Now I have no problem getting a claim paid that truly needed. We used an independent appraiser for roof and other damage after a storm but we did not require a full new roof. A roofer soliciting homeowners to submit claims for roofs, however, seems to cross the line into scam and is part of the reason our insurance went up 40% this year.
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11-20-2021, 05:41 PM | #10 | |
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11-20-2021, 05:41 PM | #11 | |
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Now I'll tell you I fully respect door knocking and do it myself. I too do it because my hobbies are incredibly expensive, yet I prefer to help homeowners when I know they're likely going to screw themselves or to stop a bad apple company from attempting to get in a neighborhood. The roofing industry last year was over $50 billion in 2020 and $49 Billion in 2019. I net between $10-15 million of that and can honestly say when done properly the system works in everyone's favor. Is your roof tile still in production? |
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11-20-2021, 05:42 PM | #12 | |
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11-20-2021, 05:45 PM | #13 | |
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11-20-2021, 05:47 PM | #14 | |
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11-20-2021, 05:50 PM | #15 |
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Well, we’ll both be 54 in a couple of months and think we’ll probably be here 15-20 years, maybe a little more or a little less. Hard to plan much beyond that. (Another reason to wish I was still 30, I guess.)
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11-20-2021, 06:02 PM | #16 | |
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You pay upfront with no effing around later.
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A manual transmission can be set to "comfort", "sport", and "track" modes simply by the technique and speed at which you shift it; it doesn't need "modes", modes are for manumatics that try to behave like a real 3-pedal manual transmission. If you can money-shift it, it's a manual transmission. "Yeah, but NO ONE puts an automatic trans shift knob on a manual transmission."
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11-20-2021, 06:04 PM | #17 | |
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When it came time for my roof to be inspected by my insurance company's dispatched adjuster, he said he couldn't see enough damage to justify replacing the whole roof. He only recommended repair on the few spots he saw. Since then, a few door knockers had stopped by and said they could try again. I'm reluctant to do that as my insurance company already has an attempted claim on record. One of the roofing company's asked what insurance I have. I told him and he said...yeah...they're tough to get approval on having an entire roof replaced and left me alone. |
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11-20-2021, 06:05 PM | #18 | |
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11-20-2021, 06:11 PM | #19 | |
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11-20-2021, 06:16 PM | #20 | |
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If your original roof had felt paper or not water proof underlayment it's ticket to instant full replacement due to code and building guidelines requiring synthetic underlayment underlayment tiles/ metal. |
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11-20-2021, 06:20 PM | #21 |
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This is my casa.... house only 1.5yrs old. Carrier paid $56k for the 30yr shingle that was originally on it. I upgraded the roof to full designer slate look shingles.
Here in Texas.... roofs last 10-15yrs if you're lucky. |
11-20-2021, 06:24 PM | #22 |
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