End-Lap Corrosion

Technical Defect Analysis

Defect Category: Cut Edge Corrosion

Roof Element: Eaves

What This Defect Is

End-lap corrosion occurs at the eaves of profiled steel roof sheets, where the factory-cut edge of the upper sheet is exposed to the weather.

As the original protective coating breaks down, corrosion progresses along this cut edge and gradually travels back up the roof sheet profile, causing more damage.

As long as the corrosion is not extensive, perforated and extending beyond the fixing line, it should be possible to treat with a cut edge corrosion treatment.

However, if the sheet ends have perforated through and rotted away in places, it is best practice to change the roof sheet. Slither sheet repairs at the eaves rarely work for long, as they often trap moisture and cause more damage.

Causes

  • Exposure of the factory-cut edge at the eaves
  • Breakdown of Plastisol or polyester coatings
  • Weathering and UV degradation
  • Persistent moisture at the eaves
  • Capillary action where water tracks back under the coating

How to Identify

  • Curling or peeling of the coating at sheet ends
  • Rust staining (“gingering”) along the exposed edge
  • Flaking or delamination of original coatings
  • Corrosion advancing up the profile
  • Thinning or perforation of the sheet end in more severe cases

Risks if Untreated

  • Progressive corrosion of the sheet end
  • Loss of the protective coating over a larger area
  • Wind-uplift vulnerabilities due to weakened edges
  • Eventual perforation and material loss
  • Increased remedial cost as the damage progresses

Condition Ratings

Early

Minor coating lift, no active rust.

Moderate

Visible rust with early corrosion along the cut edge.

Poor

Heavier rusting & extensive coating loss.

Severe

Advanced corrosion, thinning sheet edges, and possible perforations or sheet-end loss.

Recommended Treatment

If you are treating cut edge corrosion in isolation, without fully recoating the metal roof, our stand-alone cut edge corrosion treatment, Flexlap is the solution. It’s BBA Approved, which means that it has been independently tested for fitness for purpose.

If you are specifying a full metal roof coating, cut edge corrosion is treated as standard within the Metalseal system.

  • Clean roof sheet ends to remove loose coating and contaminants.
  • Mechanically prepare the cut edge to ST3 standard (bare, non-shiny steel).
  • Follow the sheet profile in a straight line across troughs and crowns.
  • Prime prepared steel with Liquasil SWT Corrosion Primer.
  • Once dry, apply Liquasil Flexlap (or Metalseal 20/SF as part of a full-roof coating programme).
  • Apply Flexlap at a wet film thickness of 350–400 microns (Metalseal 20 may require two coats to achieve film thickness).

Specification Wording

“Throughly clean the sheet ends to an area at least 500mm beyond the highest point of corrosion. Prepare end-lap areas to ST3 Standard (bare, non-shiny metal) following the roof sheet profile across troughs, webs and crowns to the highest point of corrosion. Apply Liquasil SWT Corrosion Primer to all prepared areas and allow to dry. Apply Liquasil Flexlap (or Metalseal 20/SF for full-roof treatment) to form a uniform, fully bonded protective coating at a wet film thickness of approximately 350–400 microns.”

Additional Options

  • Spot-prime rusted fixings at the eaves.
  • Treat any adjacent coating breakdown to prevent spread.
  • Replace significantly corroded sheet ends where thinning or perforation exists.

Suitable Liquasil Products

  • Liquasil SWT Primer
  • Flexlap (stand-alone Cut Edge Corrosion treatment)
  • Metalseal 20
  • Metalseal SF

FAQs

Is end-lap corrosion serious?

Whether the defect is serious depends on the extent of the corrosion that is present. If heavy rust and perforation of the sheet extends beyond the first fixing l;ine, this can cause structural weakness in those areas, making the roof sheet susceptible to wind uplift.

At what stage should end-lap corrosion be treated?

Ideally, as soon as the defect is noticed, it should be treated. If you are an industrial property tenant about to vacate the premises, your landlord’s surveyor will pick up on the defect and you will still have have to pay for it to be repaired, if you have a fully repairing and insuring lease.

Can I treat end-lap corrosion myself?

Theoretically there is no reasdon why you couldn’t treat cut edge corrosion yourself, but it is very labour intensive. The work is in the cleaming and surface preparation and remember, you’ll be working at height, so it’s best left to trained professionals. Liquasil does not supply products to anybody that has not undegone their product training.

Contact Us

We are happy to provide one to one guidance and assistance to professional specifers and invite you to call us on 0121 709 5352 or click the button to email us now.