Jc67roch
Structural
- Aug 4, 2010
- 76
I have an interesting project where the owner and architect are requesting that an existing truss framed roof be made open - like a cathedral ceiling - with the trusses (and associated bracings) and roof sheathing underside to remain and be painted on the interior. In order to get the code required insulation in the roof, we are looking to lay some form of insulation on top of the existing roof sheathing and create a SIP. However, when I checked the existing trusses for loading, they fail as now all load is on the top chord and not shared with the bottom chord as would be the case with a conventional flat ceiling at the bottom chord. Rather than reinforcing (sistering) the top chord of the truss, we are looking to frame rafters over the top of the existing roof. I have designed these to be structural, conservatively assuming no contribution of support from the trusses. I found that 2x6 rafters @ 16" o.c. are sufficient and this is likely a minimum thickness of insulation we would need anyway. However, it seems that this plan would require good connection of the rafters to the trusses in order for the trusses to act as ties to provide the necessary tension/kickout resistance at the rafter bottoms to prevent wall spread. Any thoughts on how this could be accomplished? I am thinking of either Simpson framing angles fastening the rafter ends down thru the wall top plate. OR simply toe nail the rafters into the top chord of the trusses? Or maybe fasten a sleeper over the top of the wall, on the existing roof sheathing and perpendicular to the rafters, and notching each rafter base to fit over it to act like a cleat? Any input on this design concept would be appreciated. A sketch is attached. Or premise is that framing in this manner, rather than down under the existing roof sheathing, also prevents notching gypboard or other finishes around all the truss diagonal members.