Quality Assurance and Maintenance
Fastener inspection protocols, sealant maintenance schedules, panel replacement procedures, and touch-up paint application for long-term metal roof performance.
- Inspect through-fastener washer condition and determine when re-fastening is required
- Establish sealant maintenance schedules and identify failed sealant joints
- Remove and replace damaged metal panels without disturbing adjacent panels
- Apply touch-up paint to scratches, cut edges, and fastener heads to prevent corrosion
Lección 1
Fastener Inspection and Maintenance
Why Fasteners Fail
Through-fastened metal roofs depend on thousands of individual screw-and-washer assemblies to maintain weatherproofing. Over time, these fasteners degrade:
- Neoprene washer deterioration: UV radiation and ozone break down the neoprene rubber, causing it to crack, harden, and lose its seal. In full sun exposure, standard neoprene washers begin degrading in 7-10 years.
- Thermal cycling loosening: Daily expansion and contraction of the panels works the screws back and forth in their holes. Over thousands of cycles, screws can back out (partially unscrew) from the purlins, losing clamping pressure on the washer.
- Over-driven screws: Screws that were over-driven during installation crushed the washer from day one - these fail first because the washer has no remaining compression capacity.
- Corrosion: If the screw coating (zinc or epoxy) is damaged during installation, the screw corrodes, weakening its connection and staining the panel.
Inspection Procedure
Walk the roof and visually inspect fasteners for:
- Backed-out screws: The screw head stands above the panel surface. The washer is no longer compressed. This screw needs to be re-driven or replaced.
- Missing washers: The washer has cracked and fallen off, leaving an unprotected screw hole. Replace the screw with a new washer.
- Cracked or hardened washers: The neoprene is visibly cracked, brittle, or permanently deformed. Replace the screw.
- Tilted screws: The screw is not perpendicular to the panel. The washer is compressed unevenly, leaving a gap on one side. Remove and re-drive at the correct angle, or install an adjacent new screw and seal the old hole.
When replacing a failed screw, use the next larger diameter screw (e.g., replace a #12 with a #14) to ensure the new screw grips fresh metal in the purlin. If the hole has enlarged excessively, install the new screw in an adjacent location and seal the abandoned hole with a metal-compatible sealant and touch-up paint.
Standard neoprene washers degrade in 7-10 years of UV exposure. Inspect all fasteners every 5 years and replace any with cracked, hardened, or missing washers. Use the next larger screw diameter when replacing a failed fastener.