About ice dams
The icicles hanging
from your eaves and gutters
last year may be a faint memory
now. But winter is coming, and along
with it one of your home's worst
enemies—ice dams. Ice dams are
continuous chunks of ice that form
along the margins of your roof. While
frozen, they're no more trouble than
the icicles that hang down. But
during the warmer parts of a winter
day, water melting off the roof pools
behind the ice (Fig. A), then seeps back up under the shingles.
Sometimes water can work its way
5 or even 10 ft. back up under the
shingles. Eventually it drips through
the roof into the soffits (the outside
overhangs), walls, and worst of all,
onto your ceilings. You'll first see rust
spots on drywall fasteners, then
perhaps peeling paint, sagging
drywall and stains around windows
and doors (Fig. A). Insurance
companies pay millions of dollars to
thousands of homeowners annually to
repair the damage. But it's never
enough to cover the time and
aggravation of getting everything fixed.
Now is the best time to stop ice
dams, before winter comes and
before they build up. In this article,
we'll tell you the best ways to prevent
ice dams. And we'll also outline the
few options you have once you've
got them.
Figure A: How ice dams form
Figure A: How Ice Dams Form
Ice dams occur after heavy snowfall
when warm air in the attic causes the
roof to warm and the snow to melt.
Water running down the roof
refreezes when it reaches the colder
roof edge, forming a mound of ice.
The ice traps meltwater, which can
seep back up under shingles and drip
through the roof into your house,
causing wet and stained ceilings and
walls, and peeling paint and rot.
Stop ice dams with a cold roof
Ice dams (and icicles) form when
snow melts, runs down your roof and
refreezes near the edge. This only
occurs when part of your roof warms
to above 32 degrees F, warm enough
to melt the snow, while the roof edge
remains below freezing. This scenario
is often the result of a warm attic. In
most homes, heat escapes through
ceilings into the attic and warms the
wood and shingles directly above it
(Fig. A). Although the outdoor
temperature is below freezing, the
snow melts over the warmed section of
roof. When the meltwater runs down
the roof, it hits the cold edge not
warmed by the attic. There it freezes,
creating a rim of ice. This rim can
grow, trap more water behind it,
and bingo—you have a full-fledged
ice dam.
The key to preventing ice dams is
simply to keep your attic and roof cold.
After a snowfall, a cold roof will have
a thick blanket of snow.
A warmer roof, however,
will soon have clear spots
where the snow has melted
off, and may well have icicles
hanging from the eaves.
To keep your roof cold, follow
these three steps:
1. Close up attic bypasses
In the average home, about one-third
of the heat loss is through the ceiling
into the attic. And most of that loss
comes from air leaks caused by
unblocked walls, gaps in drywall, and
cracks around light fixtures, plumbing
pipes, chimneys, access hatches and
other ceiling penetrations (Fig. A). Air
leaks can be tough to stop. You have
to climb into your attic, pull or rake
back insulation, and plug the leaks
using foam, caulk and other methods.
Low roof angles make some air leaks
difficult to reach. This work is
definitely a cool weather project; your
attic will be unbearably hot otherwise.
Always wear a dust mask, a
long-sleeved shirt and long pants to
help prevent skin irritations caused
by insulation.
Bonus: By stopping air leakage to
mitigate ice dams, you'll save energy
and reduce both your heating and
your air conditioning bills.
2. Measure your attic insulation level
While you're in the attic, check the
depth of your attic insulation.
Building codes require about 12 to 14
in. of fiberglass or cellulose (Fig. B). Add more if you have less
than 8 in. and have had ice dam
problems in the past. Blown-in
cellulose and fiberglass are usually
better than hand-placed batts,
because they fill more tightly around
rafters, joists and other obstructions,
leaving fewer gaps. It's usually worth
hiring a professional for this job; you
probably won't save much by doing it
yourself. However, if you can't find a
good price, you can rent a blowing
machine from a rental yard or home
center. Often, the use of the machine
is free with the purchase of insulation.
3. Add roof and soffit vents
Attic ventilation draws in cold outdoor
air and flushes out warmer attic
air, cooling the attic and the roof in
the process (Fig. B). The minimum
ventilation area (size of the openings)
should be about 1 sq. ft. of vent per
300 sq. ft. of ceiling area (attic floor
area), when half the vent area is low
on the roof and half is high. Actually
figuring all this out is a bit complex;
you'd have to examine your existing
vents to find the area of each, which is
stamped on them. As a rule of thumb,
put an 8 x 16-in. vent in the underside
of the overhang (soffit) in every other
rafter space (Fig. B). (If you're
planning to rebuild the soffit, install a
continuous 2-1/2-in.-wide “strip”
vent, because it will look better.) And
install a continuous ridge vent along
the peak (Fig. B). If the ridge on your
roof is much shorter than the roof
edge—on pyramid-shaped roofs, for
example—add the common square-shaped
roof vents near the peak (Fig.
B). Add enough so their ventilating
area is about equal to the area of soffit
vents. This might deliver a whole lot
more ventilation than the minimum
requirement, but don't worry. You're
unlikely to have too much ventilation.
In addition:
- Some roof types are difficult to
vent, especially roofs with angled
ceilings and no attic, roofs with
skylights, flat roof dormers and
low-slope roofs. You may have to rely on the secondary strategies we
list in the next section.
- Insulation, especially the blown-in
type, can block the airflow (Fig. A).
Take a long 1x2 up into the attic
with you and poke it through the
spaces between rafters over the
exterior walls to make sure they're
open. Baffles (Fig. B) usually
prevent this problem. If you don't
have them, add them before
installing additional insulation. A
shot of air from a compressor hose
from the outside will open plugged
soffit vents.
- Assessing the venting is tricky on
homes that have had aluminum
retrofitted over old soffits. If you
have persistent ice damming in one
area, you might have to remove
several aluminum sections to check
the venting.
Reminder
Climbing onto your roof can be
dangerous. Follow safety procedures.
Figure B: Cold Roof Solutions
Keep the roof cold to minimize ice
dams. Upgrade attic insulation to
about R-40, plug up air leaks to the
attic and improve attic ventilation.
Caution!
Whenever you make your
home more airtight, check your
combustion appliances (gas, oil or
propane-fired water heaters, furnaces,
etc.) for backdrafting. Appliances that
don't draft properly can dump waste
gases, including potentially deadly
carbon monoxide, into your home.
Fall back on secondary strategies when a cold roof isn't enough
A cold roof isn't always a perfect
solution. During winters with
heavy snowfall, you may get ice
dams anyway. Or ice dams may
consistently form at the foot of roof
valleys (the junction where two
roofs meet at a right angle), because they fill with
windblown snow. And some sections
of roof may be impossible to keep
cold. That's when you have to call
on secondary strategies to prevent
ice dam damage.
-
Run special adhesive ice-and-water
barrier from 3 to 6 ft. up the roof
from the edge the next time you
reroof (Fig. C). Ice and water barrier
is a type of self-sealing underlayment that adheres to the roof
decking and waterproofs it. You
shingle over the top of it. It's
required by the building code in
most regions now.
Adding ice-and-water barrier is
an expensive proposition if you
have to tear up an otherwise sound
roof, but it's cheap insurance when
you have to reroof anyway. Ask
your local building inspector how
far you should run it up the roof in
your region.
- Rake the snow off your roof after a
heavy snowfall. A snow rake,
which is an aluminum scraper
mounted at a right angle on a
telescoping aluminum pole, is the
simplest solution for occasional
heavy snows. If you pull the snow
down, it can't melt and form an ice
dam. It's an effective, if tedious,
solution, but only for single-story
homes. You can't reach the
second-floor roof. (Never use a
snow rake when standing on a
ladder!) And you have to take care
not to break the shingles, which are
brittle in cold weather. Most home
centers and hardware stores in ice
dam country carry, or can order,
snow rakes. Get one before the snow
comes; demand goes up after the
first heavy snowfall of the season.
- Install heat cables when all else fails.
Heat cables are high-resistance
wires that you mount on the roof
edge in a zigzag pattern and plug
into an outdoor GFCI receptacle
(Fig. C). They're ideal in spots
where ice dams regularly occur and
can't be stopped any other way.
One problem: You have to route
the meltwater away. Otherwise it'll
refreeze in the gutters and along
the roof edge. You'll have to run
the heat cable inside a downspout
so the downspout doesn't clog
with ice.
Figure C: Secondary Ways to Stop Ice Dam Damage
Rake the snow off the roof with a special roof rake, install heat cables
in ice dam-prone valleys or other spots, and to prevent leaks, add
special ice-and-water barrier when reroofing.
What to do if you already have an ice dam
Ice dams themselves aren't necessarily
a problem. It's the leaks that do the
bulk of the damage. If you can't
detect signs of leakage, either in the
soffits on the outside or in the attic
or ceilings, you may not have to do
anything. Then during warmer
weather, apply the prevention
strategies we listed earlier.
If you have leakage from an ice
dam and can't rake the snow off the
roof, the best way to get rid of the ice
dam is to hire a roofing company to
steam it off. A steamer is
like a pressure washer, except that the
water is hot. It melts the ice away
without damaging the roofing.
Chipping the ice off with a hatchet
or an ice pick can break or puncture
the shingles.
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