The Morning Call (Sunday)

Chimney could be source of your roof leak

- By Tim Carter

Roof leaks plague countless homeowners each year. Talk to experience­d roofers, and they’ll tell you the vast majority of leaks happen at flashings. A roof flashing is a transition­al material. It connects your roof to something that’s not your roof.

Plumbing vent pipes, dormers, turbine vents, chimneys, pot vents, powered attic ventilatio­n fans, solar-array-panel brackets are examples of things that are not a roof but found on roofs. Experience­d roofers know how to flash around all these things. What’s more, they know the best flashing material to use.

Flashings should be made from materials that will last longer than the actual roofing material. Caulk is not in this list. Tin-coated steel used to be the flashing material of choice by roofers for well over 100 years. But restrictiv­e Environmen­tal Protection Agency laws have kicked that wonderful material to the curb because it contained lead. Sheet lead and copper are excellent flashing materials, and I find it quite curious that sheet lead is readily available while tin is not. Go figure.

Two weeks ago I had a business conversati­on with a peer. She owns two houses, one on Cape Cod in Massachuse­tts and the other in Connecticu­t. At the end of the conversati­on, she told me her Connecticu­t home has a roof leak seven or eight months out of the year.

“The ceiling area near my brick chimney gets wet,” she said. “I never see moisture in the deep winter months. A roofer looked at the chimney and found two small holes in the counter flashing where nails had

rusted away. Perhaps that’s the source of the leak.”

Her simple statement of the facts gives all sorts of clues as to what the source of the leak might be. Did you pick up on any of them? My leak radar was immediatel­y set off by the fact that it’s a brick chimney.

This smart woman is also a semiprofes­sional photograph­er. She used a telephoto lens to take closeup pictures of the chimney from the ground. I could see she has a very nice metal chimney surround

that appears to be in very good condition. For me, this meant the leak was probably not caused by the chimney crown.

Think of your chimney as a tiny house that sits up on your roof. It needs a roof of its own. A chimney crown is a roof for a chimney, and the vast majority of them are installed incorrectl­y. Years ago, the Brick Industry Associatio­n developed the most authoritat­ive set of instructio­ns on residentia­l chimneys, including how to make a chimney

crown waterproof. You should get this free PDF download from their website.

I shared with my friend my thoughts about her roof leak, based on the evidence she provided. Keep in mind that this is a 200-mile-away diagnosis, since I wasn’t about to drive to her home and get up on her steep roof in the middle of winter to do an on-site inspection. A drone with a high-resolution camera could do this inspection, and I can assure you, if I were still in the

home-repair business, I’d own one.

I told my friend that my money was on her chimney bricks and mortar. Based on the “Three Little Pigs” fable, you may think that brick is the ultimate building material. While a brick home can resist the powerful exhalation of a wolf, it’s no match for wind-driven rain served up by a wicked Nor’easter.

You can view videos on YouTube showing water pouring down the backside of brick veneer. A house just one mile from my own has a stunning stone chimney. It’s leaking water. Each time I drive past it, I see the growing snow-white patch of effloresce­nce salts. These salts show exactly where water is entering the stone above and seeping back out to the surface. The water evaporates and leaves behind the salt it dissolved from the mortar used to cement the granite stones together.

Think of wind-driven rain like a hammer and nail. Each time a raindrop slams into the mortar between the brick and stone, it drives the water from the previous raindrop deeper into the chimney. Add to this the force of the wind blowing against the chimney face, and you can have pints of water entering a chimney during an extended storm.

The best way to minimize water from entering a chimney from wind-driven rain is to make sure the mortar is in great shape. You may have to repoint

(or tuckpoint) the chimney first.

You should also inspect the chimney crown. Be sure it is in great shape and is constructe­d per the BIA guidelines. You may discover that it makes more sense to purchase a high-quality chimney crown surround.

Finally, apply oil-based silane/siloxane water repellent to your chimney. Read the label instructio­ns. If you wait too long between coats, the first may prevent the second from seeping into the mortar.

The sealing process works best with two people. One person applies the sealer using a handpump garden sprayer. A second person operates a backpack leaf blower aimed at the chimney. The air from the blower drives the sealer deep into the brick and mortar.

 ?? TIM CARTER ?? This chimney is not watertight. Look at the white effloresce­nce stain. Water is entering the chimney higher up and then leaking out just above the white salt deposits.
TIM CARTER This chimney is not watertight. Look at the white effloresce­nce stain. Water is entering the chimney higher up and then leaking out just above the white salt deposits.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States