The roof covering is an asphalt shingle and it appeared in good condition with no visible defects.
Rusty nails in attic.
Moisture causes metal components of the roof like nails to rust and potentially break which can lead to shingle loss.
The house was built in 2006.
I noticed moisture on the roof sheathing small spots of green and white mold and rusty nails in the attic and musty stagnant smell in the upstairs bedrooms in the summer.
Indications that your attic might have a ventilation problem include wet or compressed insulation rusty nails or rust spots that dripped onto your insulation blackened plywood mold or mildew inside your attic curling or cracking shingles uneven snow melt and icicles at the roof edge.
The moisture caused by condensation on the inside of the attic can also rust things like plumbing heating and venting duct straps to rust and break.
All of those things will add to the moisture in the attic and will rust any metal exposed there.
If you have a friend in the attic ask him to direct you to a sturdy spot where the nail can bite into the wood.
Hammer a new nail into the roof about 1 inch above the hole from the previous nail.
Roofing nails are galvanized but add enough moisture and galvanized nails will rust.
A person called me today and asked what could have caused this.
Some of the nails appear rusty.
Unfinished by a builder who went bankrupt.
I have seen this condition on roof coverings that were failing but not on shingles that are in good condition.
If you ve ever been in a cold attic during the winter you ve probably seen something like this.
Rust or stains around roofing nails that protrude through the attic sheathing they re supposed to stick through are a clear indication of high attic moisture.
Less than a week later they pulled it out and found this.
I hounded the builder and original insulation company the first year.
Rusty nails poking through the roof deck dripping with water or even with little snow caps.
It s a cape style home with closed cell foam insulation and touted as a tight efficient home.
Our photograph above shows roofing nails protruding through plywood roof sheathing visible in an attic where there is no under roof condensation or moisture problem.
The nail was driven into an upper bedroom exterior wall to hang a picture.