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- 10 Apr 2020
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Hello new to forum.
We've just found ourselves proud owners a bunch of derelict cottages and are isolating onsite working away during all the madness. The cottages are stone rubble walls, we got the roof done up to the underlayer and are working on fixing the stone supporting the purlins, using nhkl3.5 for the building work.
My question is about wet verges. We're had to take the crumbling verges off and are replacing the rusted corrugated with natural slate. Can someone give me a breakdown on how to pour the wet verges for best results. I had assumed you'd lay the roof and then set up form boards and pour the wet vere over and round the edges, but some online info seems to say bed the slates in the mortar. I'm not quite sure if that's correct or what the workflow would look like doing it that way. I'm thinking of using nhl 5 and sharp sand for the verges. I've no Portland cement onsite and the shops are all closed up for the virus.
Any input or thoughts appreciated.
We've just found ourselves proud owners a bunch of derelict cottages and are isolating onsite working away during all the madness. The cottages are stone rubble walls, we got the roof done up to the underlayer and are working on fixing the stone supporting the purlins, using nhkl3.5 for the building work.
My question is about wet verges. We're had to take the crumbling verges off and are replacing the rusted corrugated with natural slate. Can someone give me a breakdown on how to pour the wet verges for best results. I had assumed you'd lay the roof and then set up form boards and pour the wet vere over and round the edges, but some online info seems to say bed the slates in the mortar. I'm not quite sure if that's correct or what the workflow would look like doing it that way. I'm thinking of using nhl 5 and sharp sand for the verges. I've no Portland cement onsite and the shops are all closed up for the virus.
Any input or thoughts appreciated.