Proper roof ventilation is critical to keep your roof and home healthy. While all homes should have soffit vents on the bottom of the roof, they also need to have another kind of vent near the ridge. Most homeowners typically choose between ridge vents and box vents. But which is better for your home? It depends on a few factors, including climate and roof slope. Let us walk you through what you and your roofer should consider when deciding between these two kinds of roofing vents.
Understanding how roof ventilation is supposed to work and why it is important will help you understand these two types of vents better. Essentially, roof ventilation is meant to remove excess moisture and heat from your attic and roof so that neither will negatively impact the home. Breathing, cooking, showering, washing dishes and sweating all release moisture that rises and ends up in the attic.
If this moisture is not properly vented, then it will collect on the roofing materials, roof truss, attic insulation and potentially even structural wood of the home. This moisture may cause significant water damage and encourage the growth of mold. It may also negatively impact the life span of a roof, which is why most limited warranties from roofing manufacturers will not cover products installed on roofs that don’t have proper ventilation.
It is also important for your roof ventilation to release captured heat. This small amount of heat release shouldn’t affect the energy efficiency of your home too much. Instead, it should just be enough to keep your roof at the proper temperature. Ventilation, along with ice and water protector, is important to prevent ice dams.
Further, it is important to note that roof ventilation should refresh the air in the whole attic space. At the bottom of the roof, roofers install soffit vents. These act as air intakes, drawing new, fresh air into the attic space. The air moves up, and the air that was in the attic space is pushed out through the exhaust vents near the ridge. The exhaust vents can be ridge vents, box vents, turbine vents, powered roof vents, solar attic fans and more. In order to promote proper airflow, the amount of intake and exhaust vents must be balanced. Either they must be equal, or there must be more intakes.
It is essential to install all roofing vents properly.
There are three general kinds of ventilation:
A ridge vent is a long, continuous vent that runs beneath the ridge shingles along the peak or hip of the roof. Ridge vents are partly covered by the shingles and add height to them, which many people find to be an appealing look.
A box vent is a static vent that protrudes up from the roof and is typically square-shaped like a box, though it may also be round. They are covered and have no moving parts. These vents may also be called louver vents. Roofers should install box vents right near the ridge or peak of the roof. They need to be integrated with the roof properly to prevent leaks and provide proper ventilation.
Ridge vents have many advantages, which may make them ideal for your roof. The advantages include:
While ridge vents have many advantages, they are not always ideal. In cold climates, ridge vents can allow snow into the attic. They’re also more expensive than box vents and won’t work on all types of roofs.
Box vents also have many advantages, including:
Box vents are more common in cold climates because they have such strong advantages in snowy and icy conditions. On the other hand, box vents do not provide as much ventilation as ridge vents, and you typically need to install more of them to provide proper airflow. Box vents are also somewhat more challenging to integrate with the roof.
If both types of vents have so many advantages, why not install them both on your roof? Doing so is a mistake that actually undermines the quality of ventilation in your attic. When there are two kinds of exhaust vents installed on a roof, air skips over the intake vents. Instead, it tends to flow only from the box vent and out the ridge vent. This creates only a small pocket of ventilation at the very top of the roof and will fail to remove the required amount of moisture from the attic. This is also why your roofer should not combine a ridge or box vent with gable vents or any other kind of exhaust vent.
Proper roof ventilation is essential to protect your home from moisture damage and keep your roofing materials from premature failure. When you are making your choice, it may also benefit you to learn about other parts that make up a roof and how they work with the ventilation system.
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