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Hail impacting a cedar roof can cause damage if the hailstones are large enough and have sufficient densities, harnesses, and impact velocities to split the wood they strike. If a shingle (or shake) does not split when it is impacted, it is not hail-damaged.
Further testing of The Clarke Group cedar shakes has shown an even greater durability to hail. The tests conducted at Haag Engineering in January 1995 showed these quality heavy cedar shakes withstood impacts of 2" ice balls traveling at 71 miles per hour.

Haag Engineering also revealed the following from extensive research:
Hail mark depressions which do not initially cause a split do not create a potential for future splitting.
Most hail-caused depressions disappear with wood fiber recovery and natural weathering.
Older but physically sound shingles are no more affected by hail than new shingles.
Hail will not affect the natural weathering process of cedar shingles.
The opportunity for damage to asphalt shingles is significantly higher than cedar "since large size hail falls only in a small region of the total storm area" according to Haag Engineering.

There is no permanent visual damage to cedar when hail indentations occur. Indentations on wood shakes and shingles will recover and are unnoticeable after several months.
If required, repair of cedar roofs is easy and the products natural coloring allows perfect matches. Cedar shakes and shingles do not have color coatings with varying color lots, as do virtually all other products.
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