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A well-constructed stack covered with sheet iron nailed to wooden rails running along the crest and eaves of the stack. The more common and not so satisfactory method requires a steep-pitched roof, the iron lying lengthwise opposite to that shown in the illustration, and extending. down the roof sides only a short distance. Note the excellent way the roof is weighted. {C. S. Dalgliesh, photo.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/NZJAG19391215.2.6.7

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Journal of Agriculture, Volume 59, Issue 6, 15 December 1939, Page 477

Word Count
65

A well-constructed stack covered with sheet iron nailed to wooden rails running along the crest and eaves of the stack. The more common and not so satisfactory method requires a steep-pitched roof, the iron lying lengthwise opposite to that shown in the illustration, and extending. down the roof sides only a short distance. Note the excellent way the roof is weighted. {C. S. Dalgliesh, photo. New Zealand Journal of Agriculture, Volume 59, Issue 6, 15 December 1939, Page 477

A well-constructed stack covered with sheet iron nailed to wooden rails running along the crest and eaves of the stack. The more common and not so satisfactory method requires a steep-pitched roof, the iron lying lengthwise opposite to that shown in the illustration, and extending. down the roof sides only a short distance. Note the excellent way the roof is weighted. {C. S. Dalgliesh, photo. New Zealand Journal of Agriculture, Volume 59, Issue 6, 15 December 1939, Page 477