Cutting corrugated roofing

   / Cutting corrugated roofing #31  
how could that possibly cost more?. you are just overlapping the same amount and size of panels to fit the size you want..

The panels I'm ordering are between $2.50 and $2.89 per lineal foot for 36" wide coverage. They make them to the length you want and charge only for the length ordered. I've recently seen a nice installation where the building has a wainscot of darker material on the wall. Instead of breaking the upper and lower with a molding, the lighter-colored top panels simply lap over the darker bottom panels.
 
   / Cutting corrugated roofing #32  
I’ve cut about 75 pieces with a skilsaw and a blade specifically made for metal. The brand is Diablo. I’ve tried a regular blade backward etc and it doesn’t really do the job. Any abrasive cut leaves a burnt edge in my experience.

Is is extremely loud and the chips really fly - you need tight fitting safety glasses, long sleeves and your collar done up.

I’ve done both new painted and old galvanized this way without issue but for painted I found the best was to clamp a couple pieces of wood onto the metal both as a guide and for the saw to ride on so you don’t scratch the metal.

You can do 2 sheets at a time but I think it takes about twice as long to make a clean cut so I didn’t bother.
 
   / Cutting corrugated roofing #33  
why cut the panels at all?. you can lay one panel over the other, making it double thick, but that should be no problem.
NOT recommended practice capillary action will draw water in between panels and they will rust prematurely recommended lap is about 2 inches fully covered in silicon sealant to prevent capillary action drawing water into the lap
 
   / Cutting corrugated roofing #34  
I cut it with a woodblade turned backwards in a circular say. Wear hearing protection and eye protection. Clamp it down

How I cut mine. Carbide tipped wood blade (fine tooth) running backwards in the Skilsaw. Wear hearing protection because its stupid loud. Learned that from a contractor who puts in metal roofs for a living.

Also works well for putting expansion joints in new cured concrete.
 
   / Cutting corrugated roofing #35  
They sell fine tooth (non carbide) metal cutting blades (71/4") that don't cost more than a couple of abrasive blades and are meant to be used cutting forward and cut much cleaner than any blade put on backwards...!
 
   / Cutting corrugated roofing #36  
About 40 years ago I was asked to help an older neighbor fix his barn roof which was galvanized, corrugated,metal. We needed to split a couple of sheets lengthwise and I started to get after it with a pair of tin snips.He said "hang on boy, don't you know how to cut metal?" Of course I didn't, so he proceeded to get a roll of baling wire about a foot or so longer than the sheets. He then went to the opposite end from where I had started and cut a slot about 4" long then got 2 pieces of 2"x2" about 1' long and twisted the wire on each end around them.He put one piece of 2"x2" with the wire through the slot on top of the sheet and we flipped the sheet over and put the wire down the length of the sheet then flipped it back over so that the wood pieces were on top and the wire was underneath. He then told me to pick up the wood on one end then straddle the sheet with one foot on each side of where we wanted to cut then simply pull on the wood handle and walk backwards while pulling up. It worked amazingly easy and made a smooth cut. I kind of doubt if it would work cutting across the way you need to but might be worth a try.

Sometimes the old timers knew more than us young whippersnappers.
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   / Cutting corrugated roofing
  • Thread Starter
#37  
how could that possibly cost more?. you are just overlapping the same amount and size of panels to fit the size you want..

Well, if I cut 1 panel into 4 useable pieces, that 3 panels I don’t have to buy. So 3 pieces x 4 panels = 12 panels @ $40/panel. But maybe not
 
   / Cutting corrugated roofing #38  
I cut ribbed metal with cutter that attached to cordless drill.. some difficulty when cutting across, not perfectly straight, but was ok for storage shed. I would use a skillsaw next time.
 
   / Cutting corrugated roofing #39  
Well, if I cut 1 panel into 4 useable pieces, that 3 panels I don’t have to buy. So 3 pieces x 4 panels = 12 panels @ $40/panel. But maybe not

I measure and then go order it cut to size so I'm not wasting money and I don't need to cut anything.. As a matter of fact I ordered some for my 12x20 shed last week, it will be here Wednesday all cut a in a nice neat package ready to be screwed down...
 
   / Cutting corrugated roofing #40  
There exists a 'friction blade', not easily found.
It looks like a regular skill saw blade but has no teeth, just a lot of slits.
Somewhat noisy but leaves nice cuts.
Much better than reversed regular blades and for sure better than abrasive blades nibblers etc.

I discovered them years back and still use it from time to time.
They simply don't wear out either.
As I said, noisy but decent cuts and lots of fine shavings that kind of look like steel wool.

Note that I have tried just about all methods and highly suggest that oddball blade.
Also not pricy at all.
 

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