Nige F 1 quisquose 0
:lol:
I'm thinking something in the lower third of the gulley, down the slope into the gutters, to move the snow ice from there so the thawed water can shift in the right direction.
But what, and where from?
"Ha, ha ... so you thought you'd fixed it did you ... you thought last weekend's sprinkle was enough to test your bodge did you? Mehawahhh!"
So there I was with my buckets in the middle of last night, collecting the water dripping through the ceiling, when I realised that my optimism of a few...
I was just going to say what joe-90 just said. Cleaning gutters without a stand off might be impossible at worst, but will make it much easier and safer at best. My house has wide soffits, so it would be impossible without. One of the best £20 I've spent.
All the snow's gone ... and no water ingress this time. :)
My guess is that datarebal was correct with his theory, and just putting a bit of flashing tape on the join stopped the water from tracking back.
Thinking about a permanent solution now, if I ever get around to it.
Thanks for that. It's certainly a very plausible theory, and the one I am working on at the moment and I have taken temporary measures against.
It would explain why the problem only appears after heavy snow, when it is sat on the flat bit, or water is running onto the flat bit before hitting...
Okay, with snow predicted for today I thought I'd better get out there yesterday and lift a few slates.
Here are some piccies.
The first picture is as soon as I got out there. The plastic tie was pushed out from the attic to mark where the water is getting in.
The second picture is...