Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#1
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I posed this question to an advertiser, and almost immediately the entire thread disappeared so let's get some other thoughts and opinions.
If the insurance companies are going to force you to replace your roof every 10 to (if you are lucky) 15 years, why would you go for the expensive long life roof shingles? I was thinking about this as an acquaintance spent several thousand dollars extra for 25 or 30 year shingles. I am thinking I would go cheap as I will either be dead or I will have saved a lot of money. I have not heard of any insurance company requirements for the QUALITY OF THE SHINGLES. Looking forward to some inciteful discussion on this.
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Pennsylvania, for 60+ years, most recently, Allentown, now TV. ![]() |
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#2
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I didn't know you could buy a cheaper asphalt shingle. Can you provide some information about it?
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#3
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Has anyone ever considered a metal shingle? Are the allowed?
I have them on my house in Pa., they look like a standard shingle only have a shine. Looks like the will hold up to the wind 120 mph & hail here & have a 40 yr. warranty. Check out Kasselandirons.com Kasselwood steel shingle. |
#4
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If you are talking 3-tab shingles to get the cost down as low as possible, I would think twice about that. What you have is probably architectural shingles. Perhaps Certainteed Landmark, a pretty common architectural shingle used around the time your house was built. I think that is the least you would want to do for the aesthetics. You can spend more for a different look and possibly a longer life.
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Last edited by biker1; 03-08-2024 at 06:11 AM. |
#5
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I was also tempted by a Tesla roof, but that was too expensive as a part-time resident. Either way, it would be worth checking with your insurance company that they wouldn't insist on replacing it every 15-20 years. |
#6
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You would think if roof shingles were an “issue” in this part of the country they would consider alternatives. We visited another FL retirement village over near the Gulf and all those homes had the tile roofs.
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#7
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Todays prices like like $39 square or $59 square for asphalt shingles. 3 tab shingles are $35 square.
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#8
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#9
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#10
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This is a question that needs to be answered by your insurance company. They have at risk data they rely on to set rates. If their data shows cheaper roofs fail more often, you will be looking at a higher insurance rate. I suppose one would have to look at the amount saved on the cheaper roof vrs the possible hike in insurance to determine which is more cost-effective.
Last edited by Randall55; 03-08-2024 at 06:03 AM. |
#11
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#12
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Isn't it a bummer that metal roofs are used on rec centers and neighborhood postal/pool buildings, but we're required to have ugly shingle roofs that are mostly excellent at heating our attics?
The Villages would have been a modern and young looking place if metal had been used on all roofs for the past 30 years. Really nothing different here than in 90% of the humdrum cookie-cutter homes throughout the US. Yeah, they're more expensive; but they last longer, more energy efficient, and better storm protection. |
#13
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#14
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#15
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IMO In central Florida Shingles are not problem, suspicion inspectors are the problem, most shingle in Florida last 20 years or more unless there was unusual weather incident. |
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