the local lumber co. will have a sheet that has a print of the roof amd a table with all the roof lenghts in 2 foot starting at 16' to 40'.
Yes, a gambrel is a form of hip roof.
No.
Gambrels are often a roof found on barns, sheds, and sometimes residential structures. Thereof, where are gambrel roofs most common? The gambrel roof style buildings are usually found throughout the country on agricultural buildings such as barns, but they can also be found on Dutch and Colonial style homes. Our gambrel roof was made by Renco Roofing and it has been protecting our barn for more than a decade now.
Yes
Gambrel
No. A Gambrel is a design of roof line that that uses two roof pitches to maximise attic roof space. It is the type of roof line usually seen on classic American barns.
gambrel
Gambrel relates to the type of roof and not to where it is attached. I have a barn that has a Dutch Gambrel roof. I have seen pictures of residential house that has the same style of roof. Basically, from the ridge, the first slope is around 22 degrees. The second slope is a steeper 45 degrees. Finally, there is a small flair out at the base.
The sprocket is the last little kick at the bottom of a roof, often on a gambrel roof.
The various forms of roofing include the Mansard roof, Gambrel, Saltbox, hip roof, and many others.
A gambrell roof is a gabeld roof with double slopes on each side. The lower slopes have steeper pitches than the upper upper slopes.
GAMBREL