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Ponding on EPDM roof

8K views 16 replies 8 participants last post by  victoriamorgon0 
#1 ·
I have a flat roof the contractor called a heat-seal roof. I think it is EPDM. It is old, but I need to repair rather than replace. There is leaking in a ponding area. My son want to cover the old roof with roll roofing and seal the seams with roofing cement. I'm concerned that the chemical in the roll roofing will be bad for the EPDM roof. I'm also concerned about using nails to put down the roll roofing.

I was thinking there might be some kind of patching liquid to fill the low area, then going over the entire roof with a rubberized fiber roof coating. This flat roof is over the carport and workshop, and is about 1000 sq ft.

Which solution is best and most cost effective?:huh: Hope someone can help!
 
#2 ·
How old is the roof??? EDPM and similar materials should last a long time. Even ponding water should not leak unless there are seam failures. I don't like his recommendation. Roll roofing has a very short life span, and is not worht the effort. Have an EDPM expert look at your problem, it might be a simple fix.
 
#3 ·
If you're going with the liquid patch, cement, or roll roofing patch, buy 30 to 50 -30gal., or larger trash cans for the area below the roof. And a couple of dollies for emptying them.

If it's EPDM, get some weathered EPDM Cleaner, EPDM Primer, EPDM splice Adhesive and some uncured EPDM in the 6" or 12" roll. FInd the minor leak and make the repair. THe supplier of the material you need will have an EPDM handbook you can study before making the repair.
 
#5 ·
I've been reading up on everything mentioned in your replies (many thanks!) and now am not sure whether my roof is EPDM or maybe modified bitumen. I think it's been down about 20 years, is on a bay in NW FL, where we have heavy rain, wind, and high heat. In addition we had direct hits from hurricanes in 2004 and 2005. This roof is over the carport and workshop and is a dark grey color. You can see little puddles of glue? around some of the seams, but all seams look tight. There is flaking in the ponding area, and some striations in the entire surface. I was not at home when the roof was put down, my husband is now deceased, and the roofer is no longer here. He put some kind of "heat seal" roofing on the pitched roof of my house as well, but it's a very light gray color, and has held up really well. The only part of the house roof that had to be repaired after Hurricane Ivan was where a tree limb made a slight gouge in the surface. I've looked at some of the liquid coverings, but the labor for cleaning the old surface and spreading the covering is not available. I just seem to be stuck over what to do!
 
#8 ·
Looks like torchdown to me. If the slope runs from left to right in that pic it also appears to be bucking water.

Good news is an inexpensive fix that you could do yourself is emulsion and mat over the whole thing. Or epdm as well
 
#9 ·
I agree that looks like a torchdown, it is not EPDM. Do not put anything that has a petroleum base with EPDM, it will deteriorate it and quick. The torchdown will be a lot cheaper than EPDM when you replace the roof.
 
#11 · (Edited)
I think your beyond coating that, it may work but not for long.

The left pick shows what appears to be cracking and the right pic shows the material is not even laying flat to the deck. Surely that gable is leaking with the material as it appears in the right pic. Maybe its not leaking inside your home, but its rotting out your eve at a minimum.

Time to hire a roofer and at least address the two effected areas in the pics.

Now the pics are stacked when i view the thread, so by left i mean top and by right i mean bottom.
 
#14 · (Edited)
Ugly, yes! Worn-out, yes! Only rubber roof I've ever seen, so can't compare. After reading all the replies, I have decided that my roof is modified bitumen that needs to be replaced. Since that's not in the budget right now, I guess I'll just do the cheapest (roll roofing and tar) and hope for a couple more years, then totally redo. I don't remember when it was put down, but am guessing that was about 25 years ago. It's over my breezeway, carport, and workshop, so doing no damage to house proper. Thanks everyone for helping me think through this, and for identifying my roof.
 
#15 ·
Mlyle, the reason I cut one response short is that second picture I didn't see posted prior. Some of that almost looks like EPDM and not mod bit. This is why I was asking if, in that wrinkled area, it was flexible or stiff.

If it is mod bit, the emulsion and mat will be a much easier and longer lasting solution than rolled roofing and tar. I just wanted to make sure it was mod bit before elaborating. Hence, is it flexible or stiff?
 
#16 ·
EPDM or Mod bit

My son looked at it again this morning, and says the wrinkles are stiff. It is really bad shape, coming up from the roof around the edges and in the wrinkled area. This is where the water is getting in. He thought he could cut each wrinkle out, put tar under them, then put roll roofing over all. We really have no funds for anything else. I do appreciate all your help.
Martha
 
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