Thought some of you might be able to help me with some tips. My old metal roof (think corrugated "tin" ) is going to be replaced in a year or two but for the time being I've rented a boom lift to paint it with the black, fibered roof paint (think "tar") to seal it up and prolong it's life until I can get it replaced. It's in the mid 50's so, while I should have done this several months ago, I'm getting it done this weekend - I know, regretting it now ( I didn't realize how thick this stuff really is).
The problem I'm running into is when the paint cools it's hard to thin and brush out. I've got the paint in the house (mid 70s) but it doesn't take long for it to cool. At one point I thought if I dumped out big piles of paint in a line, my brother and I could brush it down the roof slope as it flows. Unfortunately, with it cooling quickly, the brush would basically smear it and glide over the paint, leaving a thicker layer where I initially poured the paint. A nylon bristled broom we tried just "combed" it instead of bringing more of it down the slope.
One thing I'm considering is dumping about half of it in a plastic bucket and sitting that bucket in the bathtub with as hot of water as I can, then trying the dump method again and hurrying to brush it out before it cools. But I don't want to waste it either...
Tall order, but would any of you guys that have done this before have a trick or different idea to get this roof covered in a day?... It's about 1900 sq ft and a 6/12 pitch.
The problem I'm running into is when the paint cools it's hard to thin and brush out. I've got the paint in the house (mid 70s) but it doesn't take long for it to cool. At one point I thought if I dumped out big piles of paint in a line, my brother and I could brush it down the roof slope as it flows. Unfortunately, with it cooling quickly, the brush would basically smear it and glide over the paint, leaving a thicker layer where I initially poured the paint. A nylon bristled broom we tried just "combed" it instead of bringing more of it down the slope.
One thing I'm considering is dumping about half of it in a plastic bucket and sitting that bucket in the bathtub with as hot of water as I can, then trying the dump method again and hurrying to brush it out before it cools. But I don't want to waste it either...
Tall order, but would any of you guys that have done this before have a trick or different idea to get this roof covered in a day?... It's about 1900 sq ft and a 6/12 pitch.