Roof Rainwater over shoots gutters
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How to capture the water & move it away from the house? Water shoots ~18" away from the corner & over the gutter
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Perhaps it needs a higher sleeve to keep the water from coming out of the bottom, or put a bead of silicone around it to seal it.
thanks Nancy, the problem is not it coming out the sleeve it's over shooting the gutter at the top. so it never makes it into the pipe
if they installed the gutter helmets, call them and report the problem. Hopefully they will fix it for no charge
You might need to install larger size downspout, which does exist & it can handle a larger amount of rain water without an "overflo" problem.
Is the downspout clogged?
Where does that underground pipe drain to? If it just goes in to the ground, it will be a problem. It needs to direct the water away from the house. Ours goes into the driveway.
Where the roof sections meet you have a much greater and faster water flow than in other places. Either a larger gutter, or no cover
I think I might try using a silicone seal between the rectangular and round parts that fit together, assuming that's where it leaks. I don't know the dimensions, but it looks as though the two downspouts should have about equal dimensions, but water will not recognize that it's supposed change from a rectangular stream to a round one, and probably wants to shoot out the gaps. If that works, but the water starts to flow over the top of the gutter above, the bottom (round ) pipe is plugged up. Under NO circumstances, do you want to pile up dirt against that siding. If you do, and there is a termite within 50 miles, you will get it, and it's whole family. It's magic.
I can see that the water is never getting to the downspout, I have checked the downspout and the gutter they are not clogged, the water is coming straight off the roof, over the gutter.
The only down side I have noticed is with ice.. I have icicels in the winter. After checking with others they do also. We have had really heavy rains and have not noticed overflow. Keep bugging them until they fix it or get the address for the manufacturer and write to customer service.. For what they cost they should work.
Could they install a V-shaped piece of aluminum at the end of the gutter...right past the spout hole that would prevent the water from splashing over the ends and direct it into the downspout hole a little better? Also...not sure what that rectangle shaped piece is on top of the gutter...Never seen that before...Could it be blocking access to the downspout somehow?
I have the same problem with my Leaf Guard gutters in one spot. It is a V area where two areas meet and they installed a diverter but leaves get caught behind the diverter and it over shoots the gutter completely when we have a heavy rain. They have been out a couple of times also but I read the paper work that came when they installed the gutters and it says that the problem is a possibility in those V areas. Good luck.
I would install another downspout. The additions of a second downspout will handle the water draining from roof and your existing spout can be free to handle the rush of water where the two roof lines meet. Also think about adding a drench drain along side this wall. A french drain will help keep the soil from building up along this side of your home. If ever you let the soil become higher than the foundation you will have termites. If a French drain is not possible at least dig a trench and move the dirt away from the siding leaving a few inches of foundation showing.
One more vote for installing another downspout.
I know that if I had this problem, I'd address professionals. We had issues with gutters when moved to our current house and ended up installing gutter protection. I'm glad that I found leaffilter reviews and decided to rely on other people's experiences.
The gutters maybe too narrow or too short to catch the flow off the roof, I would call several gutter companies and see if they have a product that can help you, even after-market. Since you can't change the pitch or the roof, the gutters are a fixable portion of the problem.
I would keep bugging the company about the issue and ask to go to a higher level of authority each time. You could also let them know that if the problem doesn't get resolved in some manner, you'll be posting reviews on Yelp and Google and other local websites. If you do that, be sure that you document exactly what occurred and keep it factual. Before posting a bad review, you might have another company come look at the original work and what they suggest as a resolution.
Oh, I see this is a rather old question, so hope you got some help....if you did, would you post how this came out for you??