haynewp
Structural
- Dec 13, 2000
- 2,329
What is the standard way of analyzing a wood building that has an attic with plywood and a roof with a plywood diaphragm?
For example, a large single story residence with wood trusses with a 5 on 12 roof pitch and with a plywood or osb attic floor. It seems to me the attic floor is more stiff than the high pitched roof since the attic floor is horizontal, so the attic floor would naturally take more of the wind from the exterior walls than the roof diaphragm. But what is the normal assumption? Design the roof nailing to take 1/2 the wind from the wall and all the roof, or send 1/2 wall wind plus 1/2 the roof wind into the attic diaphragm and only design the roof diaphragm for what 1/2 the roof sees?
(ie. I don't want to provide a nailing pattern for the attic floor and a pattern for the roof and have the contractor laugh about..)
For example, a large single story residence with wood trusses with a 5 on 12 roof pitch and with a plywood or osb attic floor. It seems to me the attic floor is more stiff than the high pitched roof since the attic floor is horizontal, so the attic floor would naturally take more of the wind from the exterior walls than the roof diaphragm. But what is the normal assumption? Design the roof nailing to take 1/2 the wind from the wall and all the roof, or send 1/2 wall wind plus 1/2 the roof wind into the attic diaphragm and only design the roof diaphragm for what 1/2 the roof sees?
(ie. I don't want to provide a nailing pattern for the attic floor and a pattern for the roof and have the contractor laugh about..)