A utility knife will cut the shingles. Just cut them on the reverse side. If 
there was any way to talk you out of shingling over the old shingles, I would. 
Felt isn't necessary if you insist on going over the old shingles. Tips. I 
would put down drip edge  on all edgesand a guide is a handy tool made of a 3/4 
inch board about 3 inches wide and 7 or 8 inch high. Just cut out the groove 
length  needed for the shingles you are applying. 4 or 5 inches is standard. 
You will also find slits on the shingle  on the top  you can run your first row 
and than start from any where on the roof using the slits. There is also slits 
on the side for the right spacer of the shingles. I don't use these but the 
spacer jig. , to make sure your tabs are in alinement. architectural shingles I 
like the best , but only put them on once. They are easy to apply, but they had 
a line  where to apply the nail. Had to make a jig to air nail the shingles in 
the right area.
RJ, 
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Ralph Supernaw 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Monday, July 28, 2008 12:35 PM
  Subject: [BlindHandyMan] Roofing


  I am making plans to shingle my house. It currently has one layer so I'm
  planning to shingle over the current layer rather than remove it. I have a
  couple questions:

  1. What do you use to cut the shingles. I can't imagine what would stay
  sharp after two or three shingles.

  2. Do I need to lay down a layer of felt or can I put the shingles directly
  on the current layer?

  Any other tips and tricks you might suggest would be appreciated.

  Ralph

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