Snow Guards
Snow guards are an important accessory for metal roofs in snowy climates, and understanding them helps a Meridian Hills homeowner. Here is what they do.
Controlling Snow Shedding
Snow guards are devices installed on a metal roof to control how snow sheds, holding snow in place or releasing it gradually rather than letting it slide off all at once. Because metal sheds snow so readily, snow guards manage where and how that shedding happens. They give control over the snow-shedding. They moderate the slide. They manage the snow's release. They control the shedding.
Preventing Sudden Snow Slides
The main purpose of snow guards is preventing sudden, hazardous snow slides, where a large mass of snow slides off the roof at once onto walkways, entries, vehicles, or landscaping below. Such snow dumps can be dangerous and damaging, and snow guards prevent them. Preventing sudden slides is the key role of snow guards. They stop snow from dumping. They guard against the hazard. They prevent dangerous slides.
Protecting Below the Roof
By controlling snow shedding, snow guards protect what is below the roof, people on walkways, entries, parked vehicles, plants, and structures, from sliding snow. This protection is valuable where the roof overhangs areas that are used or where damage could occur. Protecting below the roof is what snow guards accomplish. They safeguard the area beneath. They shield what is below. They protect people and property.
When Snow Guards Are Used
Snow guards are used in snowy climates and where the roof sheds snow onto areas of concern, like entries, walkways, or driveways, making them a common addition to metal roofs in snowy regions. Whether they are needed depends on the climate and the roof's layout. Snow guards are added where shedding could cause problems. They suit snowy areas. They are used where shedding matters. They fit snowy climates.
Part of a Winter-Ready Roof
For a metal roof in a snowy climate, snow guards are part of a winter-ready installation, letting the roof's snow-shedding benefit work safely. A contractor can advise whether and where snow guards are needed for a given roof. Including them where appropriate completes a metal roof suited to winter. They round out the winter readiness. They make shedding safe. They complete the setup.
Snow Guards, in Short
Snow guards control how a metal roof sheds snow, preventing sudden hazardous slides onto walkways, entries, vehicles, or landscaping below, and they are used in snowy climates where the roof sheds onto areas of concern, as part of a winter-ready installation.
It also helps Meridian Hills homeowners to understand that getting the full benefit of a metal roof in winter, and protecting against the winter problems that can affect any roof, depends on a combination of the roof's own snow-shedding qualities and a properly built roof assembly. The snow-shedding is inherent to metal and is a real advantage, but ice dams in particular are worth understanding because they are driven by more than just the snow on the roof. An ice dam forms when the upper part of a roof is warm enough to melt the snow sitting on it while the eaves at the edge remain below freezing, so the meltwater runs down and refreezes into a ridge of ice at the edge, behind which water can pool and back up under the roof. The warmth that drives this melting usually comes from heat escaping out of the home into the attic and warming the underside of the roof, which is why proper attic insulation and ventilation are genuinely important for preventing ice dams on any roof, including metal, since they keep the attic and the roof deck cold so the snow does not melt unevenly in the first place. A metal roof helps by shedding snow so it does not sit and refreeze, but the insulation and ventilation address the root cause, and a quality installation can also include ice-and-water protection at vulnerable areas like the eaves as an added barrier. So the most effective winter protection combines metal's snow-shedding with a sound, well-insulated, well-ventilated attic and proper edge protection, and where the roof sheds snow onto areas that are used, snow guards to manage the shedding safely. A contractor experienced in metal roofing for winter climates addresses all of these together.
It also helps Meridian Hills homeowners to understand that getting the full benefit of a metal roof in winter, and protecting against the winter problems that can affect any roof, depends on a combination of the roof's own snow-shedding qualities and a properly built roof assembly. The snow-shedding is inherent to metal and is a real advantage, but ice dams in particular are worth understanding because they are driven by more than just the snow on the roof. An ice dam forms when the upper part of a roof is warm enough to melt the snow sitting on it while the eaves at the edge remain below freezing, so the meltwater runs down and refreezes into a ridge of ice at the edge, behind which water can pool and back up under the roof. The warmth that drives this melting usually comes from heat escaping out of the home into the attic and warming the underside of the roof, which is why proper attic insulation and ventilation are genuinely important for preventing ice dams on any roof, including metal, since they keep the attic and the roof deck cold so the snow does not melt unevenly in the first place. A metal roof helps by shedding snow so it does not sit and refreeze, but the insulation and ventilation address the root cause, and a quality installation can also include ice-and-water protection at vulnerable areas like the eaves as an added barrier. So the most effective winter protection combines metal's snow-shedding with a sound, well-insulated, well-ventilated attic and proper edge protection, and where the roof sheds snow onto areas that are used, snow guards to manage the shedding safely. A contractor experienced in metal roofing for winter climates addresses all of these together.
One point worth making clear for Meridian Hills homeowners is that a metal roof's behavior in snow is one of its genuine winter strengths, though it comes with a single consideration that is easily managed. The strength is that metal sheds snow remarkably well. Its surface is smooth and hard, so rather than clinging and accumulating the way snow does on rougher roofing materials, snow tends to slide off a metal roof, a tendency that is helped along by the roof's slope, with steeper pitches shedding more readily, and by metal's habit of warming in the sun, which loosens the snow's grip. This snow-shedding brings several real benefits through a snowy winter. It reduces the amount of snow that accumulates on the roof and therefore the weight, the snow load, that the roof structure has to bear, which matters because heavy accumulated snow can place significant strain on a roof. It also helps reduce the conditions that lead to ice dams, those troublesome ridges of ice that form at a roof's edge when snow melts higher up, runs down, and refreezes at the colder eaves, because snow that has slid off cannot sit there going through the melt-and-refreeze cycle that feeds an ice dam. And it simply keeps the roof clearer through the winter. The single consideration that comes with all this shedding is safety, because snow can slide off a metal roof suddenly and in a large mass, which could be hazardous or damaging if it lands on a walkway, an entry, a parked vehicle, or landscaping below. That is exactly what snow guards are for, and they resolve the concern neatly by controlling where and how the snow sheds.
Add Snow Guards Where Needed
Meridian Hills Metal Roofing installs metal roofing with snow guards where needed across Meridian Hills and Marion County. Call (765) 676-3491 for a free consultation on a metal roof with snow management suited to your home and winters.