
Roofing brand
F-Wave
We redefined the shingle, not the roof.

About this brand
Synthetic shingles built for hail markets
F-Wave REVIA and related lines are polymer-based singles meant to read like slate or shake from the street.
The line advertises Class 4 impact and high wind ratings. Check the exact SKU bulletin for your pitch and exposure.
Weight runs far lighter than real slate. That matters on remodels where structure was never built for stone.
Noise under hard hail is still a roof discussion in the mountains. Synthetics sit between rubber and metal on sound.
Material
Engineered polymer synthetic shingles
Impact
UL 2218 Class 4 on rated products
Wind
130 mph range claimed on select lines (verify paperwork)
Fire
Class A on listed products
Warranty
Manufacturer limited warranty; follow registration rules
Products and colors
Revia Classic Slate
Slate-look in a one-piece shingle. Carries a Class A fire line and a clean profile without asphalt granules. I like it for homeowners who want a dark slate look with lighter weight than true slate.

Revia Designer Slate
Estate and American Blend lines under the Designer Slate label. Deeper texture than flat laminates. Good when the street wants a high-end tile read without a barrel tile substructure.

Revia Hand-Split Shake
A thicker shake profile in polymer. Curb appeal leans traditional without cedar maintenance. I show this line when a roof needs shake character in a hail market.

Revia XTM
Interlocking shingle with a mechanical lock story and no glued laminate layers. Newer line aimed at year-round install and high wind. Worth a look when you want a step past standard architectural installs.

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