StructuralJoe
Structural
- Jun 12, 2007
- 43
I have any interesting project...
It is a 1-story plaza in Hernando County, FL
It has wood roof trusses spanning ~50' between load-bearing CMU walls
It was built in 1985 and from discussions with the owner the roof originally was constructed of plywood sheathing with Clay Roof Tiles...
Upon inspection the roof has 1 member on each truss that has buckled, typical on every truss
The owner had originally contracted a "handyman" to provide "repairs" although no engineer specified the repairs.
Members where added randomly as shown in attached photos.
I have since been contracted and modeled the roof truss with all applied loads to current code...
It appears that the trusses have no horizontal bracing
My questions:
The only member that fails (on-site) does not fail upon analysis... but other members do, why?
Bad wood grade on every truss?
Load transfer?
Lack of proper permanent bracing?
Current wind loads to excessive?
I have modeled the wood grades to be the minimum that will work for the minimum loads applied and not fail any members... but I don't feel comfortable assuming that the trusses where originally designed to not have any lateral bracing (rat-runs)
Any thoughts on this process...
Any suggestions or recommendations?
It is a 1-story plaza in Hernando County, FL
It has wood roof trusses spanning ~50' between load-bearing CMU walls
It was built in 1985 and from discussions with the owner the roof originally was constructed of plywood sheathing with Clay Roof Tiles...
Upon inspection the roof has 1 member on each truss that has buckled, typical on every truss
The owner had originally contracted a "handyman" to provide "repairs" although no engineer specified the repairs.
Members where added randomly as shown in attached photos.
I have since been contracted and modeled the roof truss with all applied loads to current code...
It appears that the trusses have no horizontal bracing
My questions:
The only member that fails (on-site) does not fail upon analysis... but other members do, why?
Bad wood grade on every truss?
Load transfer?
Lack of proper permanent bracing?
Current wind loads to excessive?
I have modeled the wood grades to be the minimum that will work for the minimum loads applied and not fail any members... but I don't feel comfortable assuming that the trusses where originally designed to not have any lateral bracing (rat-runs)
Any thoughts on this process...
Any suggestions or recommendations?