Door and window canopy help
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Door and window canopy help
Hi all
I am in the process of having a porch built by my brother,he is doing the brickwork then i have got to fit the door and window and make the roofing for it.
I am not sure how to begin the roof for it,it needs to slope up to the house from the porch and go over the window,i want to use roof tiles on it,i can supply pictures of what i meen if my explanation is not to good.
Cheers
Andy
I am in the process of having a porch built by my brother,he is doing the brickwork then i have got to fit the door and window and make the roofing for it.
I am not sure how to begin the roof for it,it needs to slope up to the house from the porch and go over the window,i want to use roof tiles on it,i can supply pictures of what i meen if my explanation is not to good.
Cheers
Andy
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Hi Andy,
welcome to the forum.
For the porch roof you can fasten a piece of timber, such as 4 inch by 2 inch to the house wall at an height so that you get the desired height for the roof. This piece of timber needs fastenng to the wall well so use some suitable fasteners.
You then use some lengths of suitable timber, 3*2 or 4*2 depending on the span, rest the top of these pieces on the piece of timber that is fsstened to the wall, and use a birds mouth joint, which is just a small v shape that is cut into the timber. Nail this piece of timber to the timber that you have fastened to the wall and have the timbers extend past the wall of the porch, then trim the timbers to the correct length. as for spacing of the timbers I am not sure but would imagine that 18 inch centres would be sufficient.
Spacing and timber thicknesses will depend on the size of the porch.
Hope this makes sense.
welcome to the forum.
For the porch roof you can fasten a piece of timber, such as 4 inch by 2 inch to the house wall at an height so that you get the desired height for the roof. This piece of timber needs fastenng to the wall well so use some suitable fasteners.
You then use some lengths of suitable timber, 3*2 or 4*2 depending on the span, rest the top of these pieces on the piece of timber that is fsstened to the wall, and use a birds mouth joint, which is just a small v shape that is cut into the timber. Nail this piece of timber to the timber that you have fastened to the wall and have the timbers extend past the wall of the porch, then trim the timbers to the correct length. as for spacing of the timbers I am not sure but would imagine that 18 inch centres would be sufficient.
Spacing and timber thicknesses will depend on the size of the porch.
Hope this makes sense.
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Hi Andy,
I would of done a better picture but I am away from home at min on a realy slow internet connection.
Normally a piece of flat timber such as 3 inch by one inch is fastened to the top line of bricks in the porch, this is laid flat and fastened to the bricks. You then have something to connect the other timbers to, you can use another birds mouth joint and nail it to the timber ontop of the wall, which is called a wall plate.
Good luck
I would of done a better picture but I am away from home at min on a realy slow internet connection.
Normally a piece of flat timber such as 3 inch by one inch is fastened to the top line of bricks in the porch, this is laid flat and fastened to the bricks. You then have something to connect the other timbers to, you can use another birds mouth joint and nail it to the timber ontop of the wall, which is called a wall plate.
Good luck
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