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Pole Barn Snow Stops

jaw22w

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Dec 28, 2019
Messages
195
Location
indiana
I am in the process of finishing my new pole barn. I walked out of the man door a little bit ago, and a pile of snow fell on my head off the roof. Didn't hurt, but kinda pissed me off. I never had a pole barn with metal roof before. The sun was shining today. I guess it just loosened up the snow on the roof and it slid off. In the next week or so there will be 6" gutters installed. I'm thinking a good load of snow sliding down the roof might just take out the gutters.
I have looked online and found some solutions, but they are pretty expensive. I noticed that the rat guard trim at the bottom of the exterior sheeting is about the right shape to use as snow stops. I need to check on pricing for the rat guard, but that could be an inexpensive solution. I need 42' of snow stop.
Anybody got any good suggestions for snow stops? What have you guys done?
 
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u2slow

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Nov 20, 2011
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3,599
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BC
I have lean-to's from both sides, so my man doors have roof over them. Gutters have guards on top. Snow has been flying off that roof 10 years now, no issues.
 

finn

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Mar 27, 2005
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16,294
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The UP, God's country
They aren’t very popular in the lake effect snow belt of Lake Superior. I have seen a few lately, though.

When I asked a couple of roofing contractors about them maybe four years ago, they discouraged me from trying the Snow guards. Said our 300 inches of LES just rips them off of a large roof.

Talked to our local garage door dealer while I was picking up door reinforcements to repair an OH door damaged by snow sliding off my 20’ eaves. He told me he gave up and tore the metal roof off his store and redecked it with asphalt shingles. Said it was expensive, but cheaper than settling a lawsuit caused by sliding snow
 

jack stand

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Feb 29, 2012
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3,342
Location
Lakes Region Maine
There is a formula for how many individual "snow birds" are required to perform properly (in your location) and not rip out. It's more than you'd think and may require several rows at the eave and another set at the midpoint.
Not enough and they'll fold over or worse, rip out.
 
OP
J

jaw22w

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Dec 28, 2019
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195
Location
indiana
This is a 3/12 pitch. So not like trying to stop snow sliding down a 6/12 pitch. I hadn't thought about ripping them out. May take a couple of rows though. I'm thinking rows at the bottom purlin and 2' or 4' up at a purlin. I called Carter Lumber and they had a product called SnowGuard. $12/10'. So, a couple hundred bucks should fix me right up.
Thanks for the help.

I'll bet the snow comes a hellin' off that roof!
 

BruceMc

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Jan 17, 2015
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Location
Fairbanks, AK
This is a 3/12 pitch. So not like trying to stop snow sliding down a 6/12 pitch. I hadn't thought about ripping them out. May take a couple of rows though.
I have a 3/12 with a 16' run. When I had the gutters installed, they required the snow stops to warranty the installation of the gutters. They ran two rows, and that was enough. The thing is, stops are for anchoring the snow pack in place, before it moves at all. Once that snow starts sliding even a little, it takes a lot more to stop it from moving.
 

jptbay

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Joined
Mar 19, 2006
Messages
608
If you have extreme lake effect, or high elevation mountain snow, I would avoid them probably, but for most others I think they are fine.

I put them on my metal roof garage. 4:12 pitch. We can get 5-6 feet over the winter and they are fine here. Snow stays on the roof all winter until it melts.

I hated the snow sliding off my roof. If the snow isn't plowed away in a few hours, it turns to concrete and is very difficult to remove.

I used the Snowguards. The have been very durable, and the snow stays put on the roof. There is a guide on their website for how many to apply to your roof.

I did not use the included screws or gaskets however. I was not interested in screwing more holes in my metal roof.

Instead I used Surebond SB-190. Super strong adhesive. It is commonly used for this application. Made install much quicker, and after 5 winters now, not one snow guard has come off.
Snowgaurds.jpg
 
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jkeyser14

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Dec 19, 2008
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1,819
Location
(rural) Maryland
If you have extreme lake effect, or high elevation mountain snow, I would avoid them probably, but for most others I think they are fine.

I put them on my metal roof garage. 4:12 pitch. We can get 5-6 feet over the winter and they are fine here. Snow stays on the roof all winter until it melts.

I hated the snow sliding off my roof. If the snow isn't plowed away in a few hours, it turns to concrete and is very difficult to remove.

I used the Snowguards. The have been very durable, and the snow stays put on the roof. There is a guide on their website for how many to apply to your roof.

I did not use the included screws or gaskets however. I was not interested in screwing more holes in my metal roof.

Instead I used Surebond SB-190. Super strong adhesive. It is commonly used for this application. Made install much quicker, and after 5 winters now, not one snow guard has come off.
Snowgaurds.jpg
I did the exact same thing after snow ripped off 20 feet of my 6" gutter. It has been 3 years and no issues with the snow birds. The SB-190 adhesive is still holding strong.
 

finn

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Mar 27, 2005
Messages
16,294
Location
The UP, God's country
If you have extreme lake effect, or high elevation mountain snow, I would avoid them probably, but for most others I think they are fine.

I put them on my metal roof garage. 4:12 pitch. We can get 5-6 feet over the winter and they are fine here. Snow stays on the roof all winter until it melts.

I hated the snow sliding off my roof. If the snow isn't plowed away in a few hours, it turns to concrete and is very difficult to remove.

I used the Snowguards. The have been very durable, and the snow stays put on the roof. There is a guide on their website for how many to apply to your roof.

I did not use the included screws or gaskets however. I was not interested in screwing more holes in my metal roof.

Instead I used Surebond SB-190. Super strong adhesive. It is commonly used for this application. Made install much quicker, and after 5 winters now, not one snow guard has come off.
Snowgaurds.jpg
Five feet is only 60”. That gets us to mid December many years. With that little snow, why bother?
 

jives

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Jan 4, 2013
Messages
2,810
Location
Central NY
Neighbor put on metal rib roofing on his small garage a few years ago. Probably a 6/12 pitch max. Several of the metal snow guards are bent over, perhaps pulling up the hold-down screws. My large, 9/12 metal garage roof has the eave side over the garage doors and every year I ponder putting on guards. But, I will not put on screw down types. Posts #11,12 are what I would do, but in reality, removing the packed snow avalanche with a dirt shovel is a hassle but not that big a deal.
 

jack stand

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Feb 29, 2012
Messages
3,342
Location
Lakes Region Maine
This is a link to a trade magazine I get.
You may have to dig a little but there's articles on snow retention that can be helpful.
Getting it wrong can be painful. I did one building with SS "birds" that was fine for 15 years.... until just the right conditions and snow ripped 50% of them out.
 

like2wheel

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Joined
Oct 29, 2014
Messages
1,693
Location
On an as needed basis
If you have extreme lake effect, or high elevation mountain snow, I would avoid them probably, but for most others I think they are fine.

I put them on my metal roof garage. 4:12 pitch. We can get 5-6 feet over the winter and they are fine here. Snow stays on the roof all winter until it melts.

I hated the snow sliding off my roof. If the snow isn't plowed away in a few hours, it turns to concrete and is very difficult to remove.

I used the Snowguards. The have been very durable, and the snow stays put on the roof. There is a guide on their website for how many to apply to your roof.

I did not use the included screws or gaskets however. I was not interested in screwing more holes in my metal roof.

Instead I used Surebond SB-190. Super strong adhesive. It is commonly used for this application. Made install much quicker, and after 5 winters now, not one snow guard has come off.
Snowgaurds.jpg
Is that picture current or from 5 years ago? Those snow guards are amazingly clear for 5 years.
 

jptbay

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Joined
Mar 19, 2006
Messages
608
Is that picture current or from 5 years ago? Those snow guards are amazingly clear for 5 years.
After install.

I think they are still pretty clear, but you will have to wait a few months for the snow to melt before I can snap a new picture.
 

WisJim

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Joined
Dec 20, 2010
Messages
2,286
Location
Menomonie, WI
I used the Snowguards. The have been very durable, and the snow stays put on the roof. There is a guide on their website for how many to apply to your roof.

I did not use the included screws or gaskets however. I was not interested in screwing more holes in my metal roof.

Instead I used Surebond SB-190. Super strong adhesive. It is commonly used for this application. Made install much quicker, and after 5 winters now, not one snow guard has come off.
I'm planning to install that same brand of Snowguards on my pole-barn style roofing on my shop and garage and I'm wondering how much adhesive you used for how many Snowguards? The SB-190 isn't cheap but if it works as well as reported I would feel better not having more penetrations in my roof. An report of how many Snowguards per tube of adhesive would be appreciated!
 

jptbay

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Joined
Mar 19, 2006
Messages
608
I'm planning to install that same brand of Snowguards on my pole-barn style roofing on my shop and garage and I'm wondering how much adhesive you used for how many Snowguards? The SB-190 isn't cheap but if it works as well as reported I would feel better not having more penetrations in my roof. An report of how many Snowguards per tube of adhesive would be appreciated!
Can't remember how many guards, but 30x40 4:12 pitch, 3 rows.

I ordered 6 tubes of adhesive and had some left over.
 

WisJim

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Joined
Dec 20, 2010
Messages
2,286
Location
Menomonie, WI
Can't remember how many guards, but 30x40 4:12 pitch, 3 rows.

I ordered 6 tubes of adhesive and had some left over.
Thanks! That info and your pictures of your installation should help me avoid buying too many tubes of SB-190. Did you find a cheaper source than buying it direct? Many places that I found were considerably more than the price listed on the company website.
 

jptbay

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Joined
Mar 19, 2006
Messages
608
Thanks! That info and your pictures of your installation should help me avoid buying too many tubes of SB-190. Did you find a cheaper source than buying it direct? Many places that I found were considerably more than the price listed on the company website.
Best deal I could find was on eBay.
 
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