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Hail damage will reduce the life expectancy of your roof and is often hard for the untrained eye to detect. You could have thousands of dollars of damage and not know it.
Has your neighborhood been affected by a Hail and Wind Storm? Are your neighbors getting new roofs and siding? If you live in Ohio, Call Us Today For a Free "No Obligation" Hail Damage Inspection!

Hail Damage Info and What You Need to Know

 

When a roof has been exposed to a hailstorm severe enough to cause granules to be dislodged from
the surface of the shingles (in spots large enough which expose the asphalt), the roof has been
compromised.

The colored granules which are placed on the surface of the shingle to serve two purposes:

1. They provide an aesthetically pleasing product
2. They protect the underlying asphalt from exposure to the sun.

Prolonged exposure to sun causes asphalt to deteriorate. This is the reason that a hail damaged
roof will tend to fail prematurely.

Heavy hail damage is obvious because of the indentations in the shingle. When the surface damage
of the shingle is not visible, look for indentations on vents, ridge vents, siding, or any other
softer metal objects that may show impact. The effects on the shingle may not be apparent for about
a year.

At this time, circular areas of granules will fall off the shingle. This is often called spalling.
What has occurred is that the impact of the hailstone has broken or weakened the bond between the
granules and the asphalt.

After a year or so of weathering, the granules fall off the shingle in the circular area of impact.
With granules missing, the sunlight (UV) quickly attacks the asphalt and the maximum performance of
the shingle has been compromised.

The Manufacturers Warranty on Roofing Shingles is void when shingles are damaged due to the evidence
of hailstorms under all conditions stated above.

Composite shingles are designed to protect your roof from water by using a tar/asphalt layer covered
by gravel and granules that protect the tar from the UV rays of the sun. This means that hail can cause
future damage to a roof by dislodging the granules on the surface of shingles.

To document damage from hailstorms that may not be immediately visible, track changes in shingle
appearance and excess granules in gutters or under eaves for weeks and months after a hailstorm.

We recommend calling your insurance company immediately after the storm, and note that there is no
apparent damage after the storm, but that you will document any future loss of granules or appearance
of bare shingles in the next few months.

Make notes on any changes in your roof after each rainstorm, with the date and observed change
(e.g. rain on May 12, 2 weeks after hail storm, significant granules found in gutters).
Photographs can also help support your case, as long as the date is included on the picture.

Even a moderate hailstorm can cause damage to a roof. The tricky part of assessing this damage is that
it may not be obvious immediately after the storm, and different types of roofing materials will experience
different kinds of damage.

Hail damage can dislodge the protective mineral granules of an asphalt shingle, producing areas of exposed
asphalt shingle substrate. If inspecting an asphalt shingle (or mineral-granule-covered roof roofing) roof
shortly after a hailstorm the exposed shingle substrate should be expected to show freshly-exposed asphalt
coated or asphalt impregnated shingle base material.

If the same area is examined much later the exposed shingle areas of granule loss may have weathered or
even cracked and this distinction (hail versus wear or other sources of granule loss) will be more difficult
to distinguish.