MCurry
Structural
- Mar 19, 2003
- 34
Referring to IRC (2000 or 2003) Section R802.3.1;
The third sentence of the second paragraph states "Where ceiling joists or rafter ties are not provided at the top plate, the ridge formed by these rafters shall also be supported by a girder designed in accordance with accepted engineering practice." The first sentence of the paragraph limits this restriction to conditions where ceiling joists are not parallel to rafters.
The way I read this, any condition with ceiling joists located higher than the top plate (say a cathedral ceiling) will require a structural ridge beam, even if the ceiling joists/rafters meet the span requirements of IRC span tables R802.5.1 (1) through (8).
Have you all read this the same way?
The third sentence of the second paragraph states "Where ceiling joists or rafter ties are not provided at the top plate, the ridge formed by these rafters shall also be supported by a girder designed in accordance with accepted engineering practice." The first sentence of the paragraph limits this restriction to conditions where ceiling joists are not parallel to rafters.
The way I read this, any condition with ceiling joists located higher than the top plate (say a cathedral ceiling) will require a structural ridge beam, even if the ceiling joists/rafters meet the span requirements of IRC span tables R802.5.1 (1) through (8).
Have you all read this the same way?