What you need nail gun measuring tape roofing hatchet framing square chalkline pry bar utility knife straightedge caulking gun tin snips.
Roofing up to a wall.
Roof leg and a 7 in.
However you may soon find that the toughest part of the entire job is getting the heavy material up to the roof in the first place something that can be solved in a number of ways.
The girder which by definition supports the inboard end of other framing members can be anywhere from 3 to 11 feet back from the corner.
The narrower step flashing just isn t wide enough to protect the intersection fully.
The flat roofing material must go up the wall a minimum of 12 or up the wall and over the top of the wall if the wall is less than 12 high.
For hip roofs the code specifies that hip and girder rafters or trusses be connected to exterior wall plates.
All exterior wall coverings whether it is wood siding vinyl siding brick or stone veneer stucco etc.
Here is an attempt though maybe not a very good one to make the roof flashing serve also as a through the wall flashing with a tile roof.
A critical and often overlooked design detail is at the termination of a parapet coping at a wall.
Proper roof wall abutment flashing examples.
Hand carrying obviously the cheapest but also the most physically taxing method is simply carrying the roofing materials by hand onto the roof.
Determining which truss or rafter is the girder may require a trip into the attic.
Depending on how the roofs join you may have to cut a slot to work it in far enough.
The omittance of the termination metal leaves an opening at the top of the coping and allows for moisture infiltration at the space between the parapet.
Bigger step flashing is better.
The most common mistake at this intersection is to allow the metal coping to but up to the wall without the application of termination metal.
I recommend 12 in wide step flashings bent for a 5 in.
Must be kept up off the surface of the roof a minimum 1 some manufacturers of exterior wall coverings require a minimum of 2.
Below are two photographs of roof wall step flashing completed and effective of a slate roof against a brick wall below left and in process with step flashing against a dormer sidewall before the dormer siding has been put in place below right.