JAE
Structural
- Jun 27, 2000
- 15,587
I've got a detail that I was given to consider for a roof truss support condition. Just want you to offer some opinions on its appropriateness.
It is a flat roof (1/4"/ft slope) with triple wood trusses (parallel chords) spanning about 31 feet and spaced at 6 feet o.c. The detail calls for these triple trusses to be supported by a 2x12 ledger board that is nailed into a supporting stud wall. Roof DL is about 18 psf. Roof Snow is about 25 psf.
The detail shows a large number of nails (7- 10d) used to connect the ledger to the 2x6 stud wall. I think this is an excessive number of nails and 7 nails from a 2x12 into one 2x6 stud edge seems like we'd have split wood. This ledger carries the truss load - and specifically with trusses at 6 feet o.c. a lot of truss load might go into one ledger-stud connection.
Any opinions? Here is the detail with the large arrow showing the critical note.
It is a flat roof (1/4"/ft slope) with triple wood trusses (parallel chords) spanning about 31 feet and spaced at 6 feet o.c. The detail calls for these triple trusses to be supported by a 2x12 ledger board that is nailed into a supporting stud wall. Roof DL is about 18 psf. Roof Snow is about 25 psf.
The detail shows a large number of nails (7- 10d) used to connect the ledger to the 2x6 stud wall. I think this is an excessive number of nails and 7 nails from a 2x12 into one 2x6 stud edge seems like we'd have split wood. This ledger carries the truss load - and specifically with trusses at 6 feet o.c. a lot of truss load might go into one ledger-stud connection.
Any opinions? Here is the detail with the large arrow showing the critical note.
