One of the most frustrating parts of fitting pantiles is the groundwork that has to be put in.
Laying pantile roof tiles.
A minimum of a 3 inch overlap is required for the tiles.
In particular with clay pantiles due to the shrinkage during the drying and firing process in their manufacture there will often be more natural variation in the tile dimensions than with concrete tiles.
Today this practice is frowned upon as with many interlocking clay tiles there are now clips that will restrain the leading edge.
When laying roof tiles it s important just to spend a little time planning tile spacings gauge first as it pays real dividends later.
Half round or v shaped tiles are then placed on the ridge of the pantile roof.
Traditional pantiles which are not of the interlocking variety use the roll of the tile as the sidelap and as such the sidelap is essentially fixed and determined by the design of the specific pantile with.
However many old clay pantiles still do not have a suitable tile clip that can be used.
The marley mendip concrete tile offers this capability while a 12 5 pitch can be achieved with pantiles such as the melodie clay single interlocking pantile by marley eternit.
Embed the ridge tiles in lime mortar to provide extra security from high winds.
Use two tiles to determine the spacing required for the battens.
Press the first row of roof tiles into the concrete adhesive.
How to tile a roof if you would prefer to read how to tile a roof and see more help please visit this link unless you found this video via my website.
Some types of roof tiles have interlocking edges meant to slide into each other.
With traditional overlapping single clay pantiles it is also very important that perpendicular lines are struck prior to laying these tiles.
8 ways to get the perfect pantile roof look for a flat spot on the back of the tile to prevent rocking.
The traditional solution was to bed the tiles in mortar to prevent the leading edge lifting.
After you have determined the distance between the first two battens measure the distance and set battens using that.
If your roof tiles don t have this feature simply lay.
Traditional pantiles tend to rock on the batten due to.
Therefore the tiles have to be laid to create the best fit and regardless of how good the tiles are there will be some gaps generated that will vary from tile to tile.
The nib on the back of each pantile roof tile is what holds the tile in place when it is laid on the batten.
Lay the pantile so that the downturn of one overlaps the upturn of the next.
Setting out and laying.