txeng91
Structural
- Sep 5, 2016
- 180
One of the details in the IRC specifies that shelf angles for masonry veneer be atteched into 2-2x studs with 7/16” lag bolts. My intuition is telling me that this detail sucks since it seems that if the lag bolts coincide with joints in the plies it’s bad news. Usually for shelf angles I will through bolt the angle to 2-2x blocking between studs, while anchoring the blocking to adjacent studs with clip angles sized for shear and eccentricity
I am currently working on a reidential project where I would like to attach steel channels to the face of built up 2x stud columns using a clip angle or end plate with lag screws into the face of the column. I am using the steel channels as rim boards on some shed type porch roofs with rather impressive cantilevers (7’-10’ from beam line in addition to 3’ corner cantilevers) where running drop beams with rafters going over the top is not an option an minimizing depth (12” or less) is a must. My goal is to mitigate cost while also reducing deflections of the roof corners. I am able to get a wood only design to work within code deflections but I don’t feel great about nodal deflections at the corners (~1/2”-3/4” at dead load only) and it would require a ton of lvl memvers especially near the corners, which is why I am exploring the steel channel option, also there will already be a considerable amount of steel framing in the rest of the structure due to other conditions.
The reactions at these channels would be be pretty light, maybe 3 kips max. I have not been able to find anything on bolting into the narrow face of muitiply membets or if having bolts located at joints in the plies is a concern. I see my options as providing steel columns where the channels attached into the wall, which will increase cost, or providing built up stud columns and bolting the channels to that. Maybe I provide periodic [pre][/pre]bolts in the stud columns through the wide face of the stud to prevent splitting of the plies. The middle ground would be to use solid engineered wood columns. To simplify this overly long post is my concern about bolting into the narrow face of built up stud packs legit or am I just being overly cautious?
Thanks in advance for any input.
I am currently working on a reidential project where I would like to attach steel channels to the face of built up 2x stud columns using a clip angle or end plate with lag screws into the face of the column. I am using the steel channels as rim boards on some shed type porch roofs with rather impressive cantilevers (7’-10’ from beam line in addition to 3’ corner cantilevers) where running drop beams with rafters going over the top is not an option an minimizing depth (12” or less) is a must. My goal is to mitigate cost while also reducing deflections of the roof corners. I am able to get a wood only design to work within code deflections but I don’t feel great about nodal deflections at the corners (~1/2”-3/4” at dead load only) and it would require a ton of lvl memvers especially near the corners, which is why I am exploring the steel channel option, also there will already be a considerable amount of steel framing in the rest of the structure due to other conditions.
The reactions at these channels would be be pretty light, maybe 3 kips max. I have not been able to find anything on bolting into the narrow face of muitiply membets or if having bolts located at joints in the plies is a concern. I see my options as providing steel columns where the channels attached into the wall, which will increase cost, or providing built up stud columns and bolting the channels to that. Maybe I provide periodic [pre][/pre]bolts in the stud columns through the wide face of the stud to prevent splitting of the plies. The middle ground would be to use solid engineered wood columns. To simplify this overly long post is my concern about bolting into the narrow face of built up stud packs legit or am I just being overly cautious?
Thanks in advance for any input.