paulharvey
Veteran Member
So, I live in a 1996 double wide, that I bought in 2007. Roof is plain 3-tab shingle and is getting close to needing replaced. In mean time, I have two small leaks at vent pipe boots. I tore into one just the other day, replacing roughly 32" x 36" piece of OSB, and have some observations....
They dont use tar paper/roofing felt under the shingles, it had a waxed craft paper....
The roof trusses, which I saw for first time, are actual true dimension 1" x 1 1/2"...... at 16" oc. And they are spruce to top it off. The web members where 1.5" x 2" but still, I was really surprised to see roof trusses made from what are basically furring strips.
Of coarse part of the floor needed replaced as well, so I found it was 5/8" osb, which I guess is only 1/8" less than im used too.
Basically it seems to me every building has a base line cost, and after a point you get diminishing rewards in either upgrading or down grading. It seems they probably saved 10-15% on materials, and lost 50% on quality.
Dont know what the purpose of this post was, guess I'm just venting
They dont use tar paper/roofing felt under the shingles, it had a waxed craft paper....
The roof trusses, which I saw for first time, are actual true dimension 1" x 1 1/2"...... at 16" oc. And they are spruce to top it off. The web members where 1.5" x 2" but still, I was really surprised to see roof trusses made from what are basically furring strips.
Of coarse part of the floor needed replaced as well, so I found it was 5/8" osb, which I guess is only 1/8" less than im used too.
Basically it seems to me every building has a base line cost, and after a point you get diminishing rewards in either upgrading or down grading. It seems they probably saved 10-15% on materials, and lost 50% on quality.
Dont know what the purpose of this post was, guess I'm just venting