The sun hits your roof and heats it up.
My house roof makes noise.
Creaking wheezing or popping sounds happen at nighttime due to cooler weather.
Load bars are a good choice when you are moving heavy or large loads since it offers a larger surface area and therefore load capacity.
Metal roofs are major offenders but shingled roofs also can be quite noisy.
Settling sounds in and of themselves are typical of most homes.
If you have a choice choose edge bars instead of load bars.
This is something often overlooked when trying reduce roof rack noise.
We tried to debunk it but to no avail.
It s the sound of the ductwork in your house expanding and contracting with the change in temperature.
When it is windy there is a creaking noise from around the edges of the roof area which is heard very distinctly in the bedrooms.
The sun hits your roof and heats it up.
As it dries it can shift and contract triggering bangs loud enough to make you think a tree fell on the roof.
If you ve recently had a porch or room addition it s natural for the roof to make sounds as it adjusts.
In older home attics unsettling bangs are more likely to be the sounds of trusses joists rafters and sheathing expanding or contracting as the roof heats up or cools down.
We started hearing a loud punching sound from the roof that rattled the livingroom.
The wind is flexing the rafters or trusses.
The wood frame under your roof experiences temperature changes from the outdoor air because the attic does not receive much heating or air conditioning.
As your house quiets down at night and the temperatures fall the cooling of your roof components can often be heard.
The noise could be coming from your roof during the hottest days of the summer when the rays.
Popping in the morning and evening is thermal expansion.
There was serenity so we thought throughout the house until my wife moved a picture of jesus from the den into our master.
The builder has brought in the roofing contractor who seems to have no idea what is causing it.
This movement creates the popping noise.
Roof popping noise can be caused by the wind.
At night the outdoor temperature lowers and the wood contracts.
This movement creates the popping noise.
As the lumber expands it moves and rubs against other pieces of wood that aren t moving at the same rate.
Those noises should decrease during the home s first year or so.