Originally Posted by
mic-d
As I heard it and it fits with what's been written. The older corro was 9 corrugations wide, that is, ends with 2 upturns or 2 down turns, to get the correct overlap, adjacent sheets were laid 'flipped'. Because the sheets have two different faces, they will experience slightly different environments in the manufacture or handling process if those processes require a particular orientation of the sheet to feed through machinery etc. Manufacturing tolerances mean that one side may get less gal, or some property that makes it rust faster. Modern sheets are 11 1/2 corrugations wide so could be laid either face up, they might therefore rust randomly or not at all for 700-800 years:oo:
Is that true Barry? Is Zinc better than the old gal?
CHeers
Michael