joeldm
Structural
- Aug 26, 2001
- 2
I am removing a 14' wall section between two rooms. That wall sits on a 4X10 timber that spans 14' and sits on a brick colum on one end and is attached with a hanger to a 12' long triple 14" LVL that holds up one section of the back of the house that I installed a few years ago.
I built a new addition that is three stories off the back wall. The base story is concrete and rebar filled cinder blocks on which I have traditionally framed a 2-story addition, using LVLs and wood I-beams, kitchen and master bedroon above. The 14" beam was part of that work.
The new top floor sits over on the existing (50 year-old) house's ceiling framing by about 6 feet and is over the rooms where I want to remove the wall, running from room to room. The recent construction's top floor's front wall, which supports one end of the hip framed (38 deg) roof, sits on an 11-7/8" double LVL that runs 24' from the outside wall and sits (perpendicular to it) on the wall I am removing. The framing in the new addition runs in the same direction as this 24' LVL beam and does attach to it. The framing in one of the two bedrooms where I want to remove the wall sits on that divider wall and in the other runs parallel to the wall I want to remove.
So the beam I am proposing to replace the dividing wall with support s one 12X12 floor system (bath and closet), the midpoint of a wall that spans 24' (the outside points of which run down the outside walls of the structure and onto the foundation) and that sits on a doubled 11-7/8" LVL. And that 24' wall supports the rafters running off a hip roof under which there is an attic with storage and the HVAC system for the top floor.
Ideally, I'd like to embed the beam in the ceiling, but the old construction portion of those two rooms above is 2X8s and so only a 7-1/2" beam is possible.
I have already purchased two 11-7/8" LVLs that I was going to run UNDER the ceiling withough cutting it into the ceiling above, but am wondering if I can rip those LVLs down to 7-1/2" and sandwich them around a center 2X8 and either side of two 1/4" X 8" steel flitch plates, wood/steel/wood/steel/wood bolted together in a 5-1/2 or 6" wide beam (depending on whether or not ripping the LVLs which I can't return makes sense). If I can't use the LVLs I assume I could use three 2X8s?
Is this a substantial enough beam to replace the wall and 4X10 (which appears not to be deflected)? Or must I use an LVL beam UNDER the ceiling to carry that load and how should I size it?
Thanks,
Joel
I built a new addition that is three stories off the back wall. The base story is concrete and rebar filled cinder blocks on which I have traditionally framed a 2-story addition, using LVLs and wood I-beams, kitchen and master bedroon above. The 14" beam was part of that work.
The new top floor sits over on the existing (50 year-old) house's ceiling framing by about 6 feet and is over the rooms where I want to remove the wall, running from room to room. The recent construction's top floor's front wall, which supports one end of the hip framed (38 deg) roof, sits on an 11-7/8" double LVL that runs 24' from the outside wall and sits (perpendicular to it) on the wall I am removing. The framing in the new addition runs in the same direction as this 24' LVL beam and does attach to it. The framing in one of the two bedrooms where I want to remove the wall sits on that divider wall and in the other runs parallel to the wall I want to remove.
So the beam I am proposing to replace the dividing wall with support s one 12X12 floor system (bath and closet), the midpoint of a wall that spans 24' (the outside points of which run down the outside walls of the structure and onto the foundation) and that sits on a doubled 11-7/8" LVL. And that 24' wall supports the rafters running off a hip roof under which there is an attic with storage and the HVAC system for the top floor.
Ideally, I'd like to embed the beam in the ceiling, but the old construction portion of those two rooms above is 2X8s and so only a 7-1/2" beam is possible.
I have already purchased two 11-7/8" LVLs that I was going to run UNDER the ceiling withough cutting it into the ceiling above, but am wondering if I can rip those LVLs down to 7-1/2" and sandwich them around a center 2X8 and either side of two 1/4" X 8" steel flitch plates, wood/steel/wood/steel/wood bolted together in a 5-1/2 or 6" wide beam (depending on whether or not ripping the LVLs which I can't return makes sense). If I can't use the LVLs I assume I could use three 2X8s?
Is this a substantial enough beam to replace the wall and 4X10 (which appears not to be deflected)? Or must I use an LVL beam UNDER the ceiling to carry that load and how should I size it?
Thanks,
Joel