Pencarrow

Western Thunderer
Still trying to work out from photos how the tiles in the valleys and sloping hip roof apexes were arranged.

The horizontal ridges seem to have red, presumably clay, half-bound ridge tiles but these are not apparently in other locations.

Any thoughts peeps?
 

Pencarrow

Western Thunderer
I should add that looking through various websites and publications, there seem to be notes and typical styles covering other UK regions but very little for Cornwall.
 

GrahameH

Western Thunderer
Still trying to work out from photos how the tiles in the valleys and sloping hip roof apexes were arranged.

The horizontal ridges seem to have red, presumably clay, half-bound ridge tiles but these are not apparently in other locations.

Any thoughts peeps?

"Still trying to work out from photos how the tiles in the valleys and sloping hip roof apexes were arranged." Could you post a photograph Chris to enable a better understanding of what you are trying to achieve please ?

I would have thought the use of clay ridge tiles, of whatever colour, may have been the case so as to take up any difference in the roof angles where they may have differed and then bedded in with mortar ?

G
 

Pencarrow

Western Thunderer
G Bloke, I don't have a photo of any of the roof valleys, always seem obscured by something else on photos, but will be easily seen on the model as facing the front.

Typical canopy obscuring shot :)).

post-8705-0-93431400-1451485893.jpg

Or not visible due to the photo angle.
post-6675-0-36456800-1458685600_thumb.jpg

I'm thinking of the valley in the photo below
rps20200511_133757.jpg

And the hip roof sloping apex
rps20200511_133831.jpg
 

Pencarrow

Western Thunderer
Best zoomed in extracts I have are below:

post-6675-0-23534500-1435616407.jpg
Top right, do folk think that's a window in the roof or a large sheet of something, perhaps covering a hole?

post-6675-0-07133100-1435616477.jpg
Again in a similar sort of area, do folk think the white patches on the roof are a bodged repair with cement?

rps20200511_134551.jpg
Ignore the red circle, that was just to point out a few years back that how I'd joined the roofs was prototypical.
 

GrahameH

Western Thunderer
Right then, my take on this fwiw...

The valley as per your model would probably be a stone cut one using what was available and shaped accordingly.

The hips look very much like they are butt jointed with the use of stone sheet / lead ( maybe if it was available ?) as an undercloak and then rendered at the point of intersection.

Your original picture ( hipped end with you standing underneath it ! ) showing what may be an opening looks as thought it was originally but it seems an odd thing to have done considering the large leaded windows are there.
The large white patches I suggest are a "bodged" repair and not deliberate openings, otherwise there are some very large seagulls around !

Stands back and awaits.....
 

GrahameH

Western Thunderer
Chris,

Further to the above, the images that you show would appear to be of a fairly wide timeframe.

If one considers the use and occupants of these buildings over time, and the ravages of weather upon the structure then it is very possible that "gash repairs" have been carried out and not in keeping with an original build.

As I have spent 95% of my working life in the construction industry ( Architects / working for an Established Family Building Contractors and latterly a Building Control Officer ) during which time there has been many interesting structures passed before me.

I would say that there have been buildings erected by the apprenticed "Old Boys" who for the most part build in a traditional manner and also incorporated local traits too. Then latterly the "I know it all upstarts" who to be fair probably existed during the earliest times of building.
Each generation has added to or taken away in their own style and also how much the owners are willing to pay for "a proper job" or "that'll do until I can afford summat better" , which of course rarely happened.

That all said, I understand exactly what you're aiming to achieve, having seen other models from your past and the detail which you put into them.

However, do you think it would matter to the N'Th degree if some of the excellent work to date wasn't quite as per the photographs ?

I doubt if anyone is still around to advise otherwise as to whether you've build it correctly or not. Ok I would expect to get one so called clever b*gg*r make a comment but hey !

Would you be prepared to make a couple of trial pieces* of what your concerns are, and post them here for acceptance and piece of mind knowing that the majority of those following will be right behind you.

G

*don't need to be full on just something to show how you might want it to look
 

Peter Cross

Western Thunderer
Chris

From doing many hundreds of tons of stone on rooves, the old method was to lay the lead on the valley boards first. Or slates coursed up there. tiles would be taken right into the corner cut off at an angle. Sometimes slate was used under split instead of slate or lead under. The open valleys are quite recent, less prone to water ingress.
 

GrahameH

Western Thunderer
Chris

From doing many hundreds of tons of stone on rooves, the old method was to lay the lead on the valley boards first. Or slates coursed up there. tiles would be taken right into the corner cut off at an angle. Sometimes slate was used under split instead of slate or lead under. The open valleys are quite recent, less prone to water ingress.

Totally agree with this Peter, I suppose it also depends upon what the site has to offer in terms of materials.

That said what you have stated would be the obvious and correct method.

G
 
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