OP
wroughtn_harv
Super Member
We worked up a pretty good system on the twenty foot sheets. Two of us on the roof and two men on the manlifts catching the marks.
We laid out the marks, every three feet on two purlins so that the sheets would stay square. One man on a lift was at the wall and would catch the mark and make sure the overhang was right on. The second man on a lift was near the peak and catch his mark.
While the younger man, not I, was grabbing the next sheet off the tractor we would tape the leading edge of the previous sheet. The tape is nasty stuff that's double sided sticky ikky poo poo. We would leave the paper on the up side of the tape. Once the new sheet was located the two men on lifts would lock it down with screws.
Then the two of us on the roof would fold back the new sheet and pull the paper off the tape. I would screw the sheet down while the younger man, not I , would go get the next sheet.
It worked out good I think.
We laid out the marks, every three feet on two purlins so that the sheets would stay square. One man on a lift was at the wall and would catch the mark and make sure the overhang was right on. The second man on a lift was near the peak and catch his mark.
While the younger man, not I, was grabbing the next sheet off the tractor we would tape the leading edge of the previous sheet. The tape is nasty stuff that's double sided sticky ikky poo poo. We would leave the paper on the up side of the tape. Once the new sheet was located the two men on lifts would lock it down with screws.
Then the two of us on the roof would fold back the new sheet and pull the paper off the tape. I would screw the sheet down while the younger man, not I , would go get the next sheet.
It worked out good I think.