tclat
Structural
- Oct 28, 2008
- 109
Hi,
I have a timber truss fabricator from Florida who has supplied us with some shop drawings for review. The trusses are for a hotel in a hurricane prone region outside the US which is why the developer has engaged a fabricator from Florida. The trusses are generally for building blocks that are up to three stories and have as many as 40 units. The drawings indicate that the trusses are to FBC 2017 RES which I imagine is the residential building code which I'm not familiar with. What are the primary differences between the regular FBC and FBC Residential and would this code be applicable for the buildings I describe?
The trusses are spaced at 2 feet c/c and will have 3/4" ply over the top. Looking at their numbers and truss drawings, the top chord clear span between webs is as much a 7 feet so there would be local bending in the top chord. I only see references to the axial loads in the members. Do truss fabricators typically ignore local bending in their designs?
Thanks
I have a timber truss fabricator from Florida who has supplied us with some shop drawings for review. The trusses are for a hotel in a hurricane prone region outside the US which is why the developer has engaged a fabricator from Florida. The trusses are generally for building blocks that are up to three stories and have as many as 40 units. The drawings indicate that the trusses are to FBC 2017 RES which I imagine is the residential building code which I'm not familiar with. What are the primary differences between the regular FBC and FBC Residential and would this code be applicable for the buildings I describe?
The trusses are spaced at 2 feet c/c and will have 3/4" ply over the top. Looking at their numbers and truss drawings, the top chord clear span between webs is as much a 7 feet so there would be local bending in the top chord. I only see references to the axial loads in the members. Do truss fabricators typically ignore local bending in their designs?
Thanks