I m afraid it s going to collapse because when the wind blows it makes a scary popping noise.
Attic making lots of creaking noises wind.
This leads to creaking popping and other strange sounds that might surprise.
This could cause the air handler to make a high pitched whining sound and the same is true of your furnace filter air conditioners can vibrate a lot so parts can come loose over time and.
It actually sounds like the roof could rip off the house.
Is is a constant noise or just occasional.
Years ago as a young builder i almost got blown off a roof while trying to carry a sheet of 4 x 8 plywood.
This can cause all kinds of inconsistent shifting and racking.
Lots of different factors could attribute to this.
Roof creaks when it s windy.
For an often lengthy period a house will creak and pop from time to time due solely to its own weight causing the soil beneath the house to compact thus allowing sections or even the entire house to sink slowly and minutely into the ground.
I need your opinion about my roof.
This house s attic makes annoying creaking noises when it s windy.
At night attic can sometime make loud creaking and cracking sounds.
The creaking sound is perfectly normal and is caused by the movement of roof timbers responding to changes in temperature.
You can demonstrate this to yourself quite easily by trying to carry something large and flat on a windy day.
Imagine the surface area of your entire roof or the side walls of your house.
The explanation is much simpler than an apparition in the attic.
The wind pressure against a roof or entire home can be enormous.
Creaking noise from roof when windy and intermittent cracking noise.
I would also consider sitting in the loft with the lights on while the wind is blowing as this may make it glaringly obvious.
In other cases a roof will creak at any time of day whenever there s the.
Is is a constant noise or just occasional.
That will mitigate the wood contraction that causes creaking sounds from the roof.
Spray foam insulation added to the attic ceiling immediately opposite the roof will keep the wood frame and rafters at a more steady temperature.
Structural engineers will be the first to tell you that the combined pressure of a moderate wind is equivalent to thousands of pounds of force depending on the surface area.