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Patio roof to house attachment question

29K views 1 reply 2 participants last post by  usmcstormvet 
#1 ·
Hello. Great site with lots of great info.

I am an amateur carpenter with some experience in framing, decks, and roofing.

I am planning to install a 10' x 32' back patio cover on my house. It will have 4x4 uprights, 2x6 header, 2x8 ledger, 2x6 frame, and a preferably a tin roof.

I am pondering how to attach it to the house. The house has a hip roof. The lower edge of the facia board at the house is 7' from the slab.

Option 1 and the one I prefer is pulling off the facia board, installing a 2x8 ledger board using one 3/8 x 6" lag bolt through the ledger and into the ends of each of the house rafter boards. I would then butt the 2x6 patio rafters into the ledger with joist hangers. I would also butt the patio rafters into the 2x6 header at the outside end of the patio with joist hangers. This would give me 7' of headroom at the the house, and 6'6" of headroom at the outside end if I drop the roof 6" for runoff.

The small bump in areas where the roof line is recessed would be framed in behind the ledger and plywood and shingles will cover them, extending the existing shingled roof to the ledger.

I would tar paper over the joint where the ledger meets the house, and then use flashing under the last row of house shingles and extend the flashing either 12" or 18" out over the patio tin roof.

We get quite a bit of rain here, but no snow.

I realize other option is going up and tieing into the house roof, using plywood sheathing, tar paper and then shingle the patio roof.

I would rather use the tin roof option. In your collective experienced opinions, is my plan workable or is it a complete mess?

Do you have any suggestions

Thanks for any help.
Mike
 

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#2 ·
What's the purpose of the patio? Keeping rain off your trailer, covered work area, dining, etc?

Personally, I'd go with option 2. More astetically pleasing build without the noise of rain plinking on a tin-roof while using the patio (cookout goes undercover during rainstorm - very loud). Saves you from framing/shingling around bump-outs, no seam from shingles to tin either.

I just ripped down a fiberglass porch from my house that was almost the same set-up as you speak. Now building new porch tied to roof.
 
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