I think the minimum pitch you can get away with given snow in MA/NY/NJ (where I am) is 4 in 12. That means a 4" rise for every 12" across. Probably 6 in 12 is better. I believe mine is 4 in 12 and it is doing OK.
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Great diagram. And let me put a ++ on overhang. I have 2' overhangs and I am grateful every day I decided to go with that!View attachment 3379777
This diagram may help show what each pitch looks like. For areas with snow, 3/12-6/12 is typical I think. So for every foot wide the run is, the tall wall should be at least 3 inches taller than the short wall. So if the run is 6 feet wide, your tall wall is 18 inches taller than the short wall at a minimum. Or more to be on the safe side.
And keep in mind that the roof will need to be more than 6 feet long because the angle makes it longer than the floor width AND you want overhang. And I believe you want the waves in the roof to be pointing downhill so they are like slides for the snow to slip down (not bumps the snow catches on). Hope that makes sense. Wasn’t sure how to describe that. But it’s often easiest to design around the material, so something to think about.
Thanks. I figured the slope would make it longer and knew about ridges and overhang. Not sure how much longer the slope makes it though .. something to try to figure out. I like having a plan well in advance. LolView attachment 3379777
This diagram may help show what each pitch looks like. For areas with snow, 3/12-6/12 is typical I think. So for every foot wide the run is, the tall wall should be at least 3 inches taller than the short wall. So if the run is 6 feet wide, your tall wall is 18 inches taller than the short wall at a minimum. Or more to be on the safe side.
And keep in mind that the roof will need to be more than 6 feet long because the angle makes it longer than the floor width AND you want overhang. And I believe you want the waves in the roof to be pointing downhill so they are like slides for the snow to slip down (not bumps the snow catches on). Hope that makes sense. Wasn’t sure how to describe that. But it’s often easiest to design around the material, so something to think about.
Thanks!!I think the minimum pitch you can get away with given snow in MA/NY/NJ (where I am) is 4 in 12. That means a 4" rise for every 12" across. Probably 6 in 12 is better. I believe mine is 4 in 12 and it is doing OK.
I am hoping to add onto my run this spring...... I want to make a lean to covered run that is 8x10 with roof sloping on the 8' side...... I have tried to look up slopes etc and just don't understand it. We get snow here so keep that in mind. Thinking of making the tall side around 6' high. what height should the shorter side be???
I will be covering with the metal
They have calculators online. If there isn’t a handy ones for roofs, I know there are ones to calculate the “hypotenuse” of a right triangle. Just make sure to add the overhang widths too. So if you want tall wall 8 feet apart from short wall and say a pitch of 4/12, but you also want a 2 foot overhang on each side, then you want to calculate 8+2+2 (or 12) as the bottom of the triangle, and 4 inches x 12 feet (equals 48 inches or 4 ft) for your side of the triangle. Then plug those in online and get your hypotenuse or roof length.Thanks. I figured the slope would make it longer and knew about ridges and overhang. Not sure how much longer the slope makes it though .. something to try to figure out. I like having a plan well in advance. Lol
Then make the framing strong to handle the snow load.We get snow here so keep that in mind.
We have a roof rake so good with that. My thing was if we aren't home so didn't want it flat. I knew there was a certain pitch for the area and thankfully someone here knew it and posted it.Then make the framing strong to handle the snow load.
Pitch would have to be very steep(like at least 45°) to actually shed snow.
Might want to invest in a roof rake.