Tar paper, roofing paper, felt paper, underlayment, or roofing tar paper is a heavy-duty paper used in construction. Tar paper is made by impregnating paper with tar, producing a waterproof material useful for roof construction. Tar paper is similar to roofing felt, historically a felt-like fabric made from recycled rags impregnated with melted Bitumen, and today evolving into a more complex underlayment of synthetic mesh or fiberglass strands waterproofed by synthetically enhanced asphalt.
Grade papers are rated in minutes: the amount of time it takes for a moisture-sensitive chemical indicator to change color when a small boat-like sample is floated on water. Common grades include 10-, 20-, 30-, and 60-minute. The higher the rating, the heavier and more moisture-resistant the paper. A typical 20-minute paper will weigh about per square, a 30-minute paper per square, and a 60-minute paper about per square. The smaller volume of material, however, does tend to make these papers less resistant to moisture than heavier felts.
It is typically stapled in place, or held with , and is sometimes applied in several layers with hot asphalt, cold Bitumen (adhesive), or non-asphaltic adhesives.
Older construction typically used a lighter-weight tar paper, stapled up with some overlap, as a water- and wind-proofing material on walls, largely displaced in recent decades by breathable plastic housewrap, commonly in widths.
In the 19th and early 20th centuries, of wooden frames covered with tar paper were a common form of temporary structure or very low-cost permanent housing in the rural United States and Canada, particularly in the temperate American South.
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