High Wind Nailing Pattern for Shingles Installation

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high speed nailing pattern

When preparing for aย roofing jobย you need more than just a good coil roofing nailer. You also need more than a solid understanding of OSHAย safety rules.ย Whether it be a complete re-shingle or simply a repair, youโ€™reย bound to hear talk about a high-wind nailing pattern. This goes double if you live near the coast or anywhere in Florida. In hurricane-prone areas high-wind nailing patterns areย mandated by local building codes.

The high wind shingle nailing pattern came about (officially, at least) inย 2003. Since then, the International Building Code required roofers to fasten shingles using sixย nails. You must also properly space nails in front of the seal line. They required these high-wind-rated products on any roofs in wind regions rated at or above 110 mph. Shingle manufacturers now produce products rated somewhere between 60 and 130ย mph, using two-hour duration tests.

See our article on How to use a roofing nailer.

High Wind Nailing Pattern for 3-Tab Shingles

So what does this high windย nailing pattern look like? On traditional 3-tab shingles it would look likeย this:

high wind nailing pattern 3-tab shingles
Red dots mark the nail holes for a 6-nail high wind nailing pattern on traditional 3-tab shingles

Note that the nails are just below the tar line. Keep your nails on either sideย of the gap. You want them away from the middle of each individual shingle. That ensures the gap inย the shingle above doesnโ€™t expose the nail head underneath. Here is a visual example ofย what you donโ€™t want:

3-tab shingles nail gaps
Note how nails (marked as red dots) in the middle of a 3-tab shingle will beย exposed when the next layer is applied.

High Wind Nailing Pattern for Architectural Shingles

For architectural orย dimensional shingles, the nailing pattern would look something like this:

high wind nailing pattern for architectural shingles
Red dots mark the nail holes for a 6-nail high wind pattern on architectural shingles

With architecturalย shingles, you donโ€™t have to worry about nails poking through the gaps. Unlikeย 3-tab shingles, they use an architectural layer atop a solid layer so no gaps exist. As a result, you simplyย space out the nails evenly across the width of the shingle. Be sure to keepย around 1-inch in from the sides and keep the nails just below theย tar line. You also donโ€™t want any nails to appear below the level of the shingle that rests on top of theย nails.

Additional Tips for the Work

Some roofing coilย nailers have an adjustable shingle guide. This lets you automatically set the positionย of the nail with respect to the bottom of the shingle. This is extremely handy,ย though after a while you will likely find yourself, guide-free,ย nailing away quickly and accurately once youโ€™ve done a couple of rows.

We recommend a 6 nailย pattern regardless of whether or not you live in a high-wind area. It simplyย doesnโ€™t take all that much more effort. Most people use pneumatic roofing nailers, so adding n extra couple of hits takes little effort. Theย cost certainly isnโ€™t much more either. Take into account the hassle associatedย with any kind of early roofing material failure, and youโ€™ll probably agree thatย a little extra time and money spent up front can save a lot of hassle down theย road.

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