You should be a inspection trainer, hands down one of the best roof inspections and detail I’ve ever seen on the tube! Great job thanks for sharing -WMRoofing LLC
How are you going to teach or show how to inspect a roof for hail damage if there was no hail at the property? The video would've made more sense if you showed how to document hail damage on all 4 elevations and the roof itself. Just some feedback.
It's equally important to know what is not hail damage. You need to know what is and what is not, in order to verify that a roof did in fact withstand the storm.
Hey thanks for the comment! You are technically correct, you should place it on a flat surface (usually a clipboard) that’s laying on the field shingles. Placing the pitch gauge flat against a single shingle surface vs flat on a clip board makes almost no difference in the pitch readings. However if shingles are cupped or curled then you wouldn’t want to place the gauge directly against the shingle. Also wouldn’t want to straddle two shingles as this would give incorrect.
Excellent video, thank you
You’re welcome!
You should be a inspection trainer, hands down one of the best roof inspections and detail I’ve ever seen on the tube! Great job thanks for sharing
-WMRoofing LLC
Hey thanks for the nice comment!!
Nice! Love how you’re very detail in your instruction and have a really good pace so I can follow easily. Thanks!
Thanks for watching!! And for commenting!
Another great video! Thank you for the awesome content Sir.
Thanks for this !!!!! Subscribed
Well done
Great video
Awesome!!!
Keep these coming!
How are you going to teach or show how to inspect a roof for hail damage if there was no hail at the property? The video would've made more sense if you showed how to document hail damage on all 4 elevations and the roof itself. Just some feedback.
Well they still need to see the process and how to document.
It's equally important to know what is not hail damage. You need to know what is and what is not, in order to verify that a roof did in fact withstand the storm.
You didn't even show what wasn't though. You literally showed a nice roof with no damage.
So that gutter guard is useless if the client has screens on top of the gutter
Gutter guards do mostly protect the gutters from hail but you should be able to see hail damage on the guards.
You are not using the pitch gauge correctly.
Hey thanks for the comment! You are technically correct, you should place it on a flat surface (usually a clipboard) that’s laying on the field shingles. Placing the pitch gauge flat against a single shingle surface vs flat on a clip board makes almost no difference in the pitch readings. However if shingles are cupped or curled then you wouldn’t want to place the gauge directly against the shingle. Also wouldn’t want to straddle two shingles as this would give incorrect.
@@pattersonadjustertraining You put the top of it on the upper shingles bottom edge to replicate the angle the stacked shingles have.
Ah yeah you’re right just noticed that good eye!😂