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        Picture of GREEN 270
        posted
        how necessary are gutters,say on a 3 family
        house???? the foundation is protected from the
        usual splashing,etc. here in N.E. we had a really
        bad combination of storms without any melting
        respite and thus many blocked gutters and the
        usual leaking problems associated with ice
        blockage.. just a thought...would really like the
        complete low-down of pros and cons...early on
        again ..thanx...all of you have always been very
        willing to add your expertise to any problem
         
        Posts: 41 | Registered: Sep 21, 2007Reply With QuoteReport This Post
        Picture of Jaybee
        posted Hide Post
        Can you have a house without gutters......Yes. Should you have a house without gutters......Probably not.

        The main purpose of guttering is to move the massive amounts of water that can collect on a roof away form the house and it's foundation. A house without gutters will soon develop an eroded drain line. Depending on the slope and type of ground, this water may find it's way in to the basement or crawlspace. Proper guttering and downspouts divert this water away from the house.


        Jaybee
         
        Posts: 9115 | Location: Knoxville, Tennessee | Registered: Sep 27, 2003Reply With QuoteReport This Post
        Picture of joecaption
        posted Hide Post
        I'm orginaly from NH.
        I would install over sized seamless gutters and down spouts, with hidden gutter hangers every 2', install an outlet in the soffit and run heat tapes in the gutter and down spout.
        The biggest thing is to make sure there's baffles and more then enough insulation in the attic, in your area it needs a min. or R-50.
        This will prevent ice damms.


        joecaption
         
        Posts: 17756 | Location: Hartfield VA | Registered: Jan 31, 2004Reply With QuoteReport This Post
        posted Hide Post
        I can tell you that I have installed them on my house in AZ, where in a good YEAR we get 7" of rain. It makes a big difference, avoids rot and damage and makes it nicer to walk near the house in the rain. It is a major requirement in my mind.
         
        Posts: 2424 | Registered: Apr 11, 2005Reply With QuoteReport This Post
        Picture of joecaption
        posted Hide Post
        World of differance between the to locations.


        joecaption
         
        Posts: 17756 | Location: Hartfield VA | Registered: Jan 31, 2004Reply With QuoteReport This Post
        Picture of GREEN 270
        posted Hide Post
        now that we have some discussion going let's
        get a little history for the reason behind the
        original post.....during the aforementioned storm
        we lost our downspouts,but not our gutters and
        although i have repaired one of them the other
        poses a problem...but...we have left the 2nd downspout alone...now...i have watched during
        many storms as the run off from the roof falls
        thru the downspout opening and hits the splash block and is diverted away from the house and
        effectively watering the lawn...now i'm not saying this is an ideal situation,but it did lead me to try
        thru this forum to find the pros and cons about
        gutter systems,and i just thought the DIYers
        might enjoy the back and forth of something like
        this,crazy as it seems...maybe even some wacky
        suggestions and solutions...just a thought
         
        Posts: 41 | Registered: Sep 21, 2007Reply With QuoteReport This Post
        posted Hide Post
        Yes, Joe, I realize there is a world of difference. My point is, if I need them in AZ, you for sure need them anywhere else in the country because everyone gets more rain than we do.
         
        Posts: 2424 | Registered: Apr 11, 2005Reply With QuoteReport This Post
        posted Hide Post
        If the weather is that bad there I would use gutter straps. You can also purchase attachments for the bottom of the down spouts to send water to the yard. Some fold down some roll out, just be sure to take them off before any freezing.
        Gutters for sure..
         
        Posts: 606 | Registered: Jan 29, 2010Reply With QuoteReport This Post
        Picture of GREEN 270
        posted Hide Post
        OK how's about we give the DIYers some
        more fodder for our on-going PROs & CONs
        of house gutters....about our house...it
        is an old farmstead,about 150 yar old..
        it is 3 family(2 & 1/2 to the gutters)
        it sits on a rock solid 7 foot found-
        ation...5 underground and 2 above,there-
        fore the house is 2 feet off the ground..
        at the base there is a pitched concrete
        slab which dutifitly splashes rainwater
        away from the house and there are bubbles
        around the cellar windows...granted a no-
        gutter would produce more water cascading
        down onto the slab,there has always been
        the water cascading down the siding since
        the house was built and this was before the
        slab...as for Arizona,aren't a lot of the
        houses out there built low to the ground???
        anyway...just a thought..any rebuttals???

        was built,and the
         
        Posts: 41 | Registered: Sep 21, 2007Reply With QuoteReport This Post
        posted Hide Post
        WOW!.... Just do what you want dude.
         
        Posts: 606 | Registered: Jan 29, 2010Reply With QuoteReport This Post
        Picture of Conrad
        posted Hide Post
        The wider the eaves extend past the house's outside walls (on a hip roofed house), can also determine if gutters are really needed. Assuming there is enough slope to allow all runoff water to drain away from the foundation. I believe there were some Frank Lloyd Wright homes that had this feature, all around the house the eaves extended maybe 4 feet?
         
        Posts: 6645 | Location: Plains and Mountains | Registered: Sep 26, 2003Reply With QuoteReport This Post
        Picture of GREEN 270
        posted Hide Post
        OKAY...some more fodder
        Conrad ,your post sent me scurrying...
        i had someone drive me slowly(and safely)
        around some of our local neighborhoods and
        i spotted at least 25 structures without
        gutters...and more than a few of them were
        vintage schools and churches...admittedly
        too most of them were older houses,etc and
        they were all of at least two to three
        stories high...and on most the overhang was
        no more than that on my home...and too most
        of these structures were well sealed at their
        base,many with concrete all around(except of
        course many of the homes)...again....
        just a thought
         
        Posts: 41 | Registered: Sep 21, 2007Reply With QuoteReport This Post
        Picture of Conrad
        posted Hide Post
        We only have gutters (with snow breaks) on one side of our mountain home. And a short section over one side over a kitchen door.

        The eaves are not wide, but this is CO where the soil is very dry/rocky, and any runoff leads away from the foundation.

        The reason they are there is so the deck does not have a deluge of water/snow melt on it, and we don't have it running down our necks when we step out of the deck doors.

        Many residential developments actually require gutter systems to divert and lead water away from foundations (both yours and your neighbors) as there is not enough room (or planning) for proper slope between homes. That is my theory anyway.

        This message has been edited. Last edited by: Conrad,
         
        Posts: 6645 | Location: Plains and Mountains | Registered: Sep 26, 2003Reply With QuoteReport This Post
        Picture of GREEN 270
        posted Hide Post
        HEY CONRAD....GOOD ANSWER...this is what i
        was hoping for with my original post..out
        there in DIY land there are as many solutions
        as there are situations which require the
        gutters....thanx for this one,it makes sense
        don't get me wrong,i believe in gutters
        i just thought there was probably many
        situations where gutters could,of necessity,
        not have to be used or be totally mandated..
        any others??? let's hear about them



        y
         
        Posts: 41 | Registered: Sep 21, 2007Reply With QuoteReport This Post
        Picture of joecaption
        posted Hide Post
        Take another look at some homes that against code the home was built to close to the ground, almost any shed, homes with decks built attached to the side of the house, homes with doorways even with the thresholds of the doors.
        In most causes with no gutters your going to see siding, sheathing, rim joist and subfloor damage.
        Check around on this and any DIY web site for some pictures people have posted of what there having to deal with.


        joecaption
         
        Posts: 17756 | Location: Hartfield VA | Registered: Jan 31, 2004Reply With QuoteReport This Post
        Picture of GREEN 270
        posted Hide Post
        i'm baaaack...just an update of sorts...to all the responders...thanx for all your input..first up
        JAYBEE,you supplied the first input it being the logic of why gutters are necessary...then there is
        you JOE with your usual rules,regulations and guide
        lines...then there was MOSTERNAZ who most logically
        had to put gutters out there in Arizona...RON45 you
        chipped in with additional options...and you CONRAD
        seemed to have an open mind about gutters and then
        shared with us your solutions to having no seemingly
        necessary gutters,but making sure your entrances were taken care of...and now some more history of our situation...first off i had mentioned in one of
        my previous posts that we lost two downspouts in a
        srorm and replaced one...now for my wife's sake and
        the old saying..'better safe than sorry'we have fixed the second downspout...heck the gutter was already there anyway...now more history...many of
        you have probably heard of the 'perfect storm'that
        was made into a movie..well we had sort of a that
        type of storm system back in 2011..in late Jan and
        early Feb.we had five storms in seven days with a
        total of 22 plus inches of snow..and..NO MELTING
        state emergency was declared as countless roofs
        caved in and the roofers were 'out straight'...
        we had some water damage from 'ice blocks' that
        formed...and another thing is that this slope of our
        roof is dead north!!!no sun at all and as the roofer said,when the snow finally started sliding
        off the roof it just clogged the gutters and without
        any melting the roof itself warmed a bit and it just
        plain backed up until it found a small entrance and
        then proceeded to run down a rafter and down the wall...as all explained a very long shot on this ever happening again this way..don't really know
        if non-gutters would have allowed the snow to fall
        freely...let's hear about options to prevent this
        type of thing happening in the manner it did
        but most important and impressive to me is the
        response from all of you and your welcome input
        regardless of where this debate goes,my heartfelt thanx to all of you DIYers
         
        Posts: 41 | Registered: Sep 21, 2007Reply With QuoteReport This Post
        Picture of joecaption
        posted Hide Post
        Is there Ice and Water shield under those shingles up at least 4'?
        Is there soffit vents that are not all cover up with insulation.
        What venting do you have on the rest of the roof.
        How much insulation is in the attic?
        Was there heat tapes in the gutters and down spout?


        joecaption
         
        Posts: 17756 | Location: Hartfield VA | Registered: Jan 31, 2004Reply With QuoteReport This Post
        posted Hide Post
        I totally agree with Jaybee.
        Gutters in house and specially on roof removes the water and helps in maintaining the roof. Roof without gutter can have a lot of standing water which may further lead to many problems like leaks, mosquitoes, diseases etc. So gutters are necessary to have proper sewage facility.
         
        Posts: 3 | Registered: Aug 13, 2012Reply With QuoteReport This Post
        Picture of GREEN 270
        posted Hide Post
        jUST CHECKING AGAIN.......
        first off,welcome Henry,made some god points about standing water...more about that later...
        although i have installed a gutter system on my enclosed deck,i am not gutter-wise...soooo Joe tell
        me about ice and water shields,and soffit vents..
        heating tapes and the such i am familiar with,
        having helped my B-I-L install them on his single
        family home...venting,insul,etc. are standard nec-
        essities in top attics,but ours is an unused side attic and after our little 'perfect storm'incident
        our roofer advised us to continue to keep this area
        cool...now i know this will really prompt response.
        now about standing water...this can happen even in the best of gutter situations....all one needs
        is a depressed area that does not soak up the water rapidly and 'viola' standing water...it is then the duty of the resident to sweep the water to a more
        acceptable area....i have aseen this even when roll-out downspouts are used to send the water further out away from the structure...so basically standing
        water is just something we all deal with,hopefully
        in a timely manner for the wellbeing of all......
        i sure expect some rebuttal on this one...thanx
         
        Posts: 41 | Registered: Sep 21, 2007Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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