skimboard20
Structural
- Mar 10, 2021
- 21
Hi all,
I am working with an architect that would like to cantilever floor joists from the interior of the house to the exterior in order to form an 8 ft cantilevered deck. I am aware of the thermal bridging and waterproofing issues associated with this, but right now I am trying to convince myself that the joists are strongth enough and satisfy deflection requirements.
The joists are 26 ft long (8 ft cantilever, 18 ft backspan). The house is located in an area with a relatively large snow load (65 psf).
Right now I have settled on PSL 3-1/2 x 11-7/8 @ 16"oc for the floor framing. This conservatively satisfies deflection requirements. However, instead of furring up the rest of the floor to allow for a sloped deck, the architect is wondering if we can taper the PSL joists at the cantilever. Assuming 1/4 in. per 1 ft slope, we lose about 2 in. of joist depth at the end of the cantilever (11-7/8" deep over support, 9-7/8" at cantilever tip).
My first question is if anyone thinks tapering PSL material is a bad idea to begin with. My second concern is the additional tip deflection that will arise from the continuously reduced cross section (if anyone has any resources on how to calculate deflection for a member with a linearly variable cross section, I'm all ears).
Mainly I'm just looking for some fellow structural engineer insight, which I so happily accept on this forum.
Thanks!
I am working with an architect that would like to cantilever floor joists from the interior of the house to the exterior in order to form an 8 ft cantilevered deck. I am aware of the thermal bridging and waterproofing issues associated with this, but right now I am trying to convince myself that the joists are strongth enough and satisfy deflection requirements.
The joists are 26 ft long (8 ft cantilever, 18 ft backspan). The house is located in an area with a relatively large snow load (65 psf).
Right now I have settled on PSL 3-1/2 x 11-7/8 @ 16"oc for the floor framing. This conservatively satisfies deflection requirements. However, instead of furring up the rest of the floor to allow for a sloped deck, the architect is wondering if we can taper the PSL joists at the cantilever. Assuming 1/4 in. per 1 ft slope, we lose about 2 in. of joist depth at the end of the cantilever (11-7/8" deep over support, 9-7/8" at cantilever tip).
My first question is if anyone thinks tapering PSL material is a bad idea to begin with. My second concern is the additional tip deflection that will arise from the continuously reduced cross section (if anyone has any resources on how to calculate deflection for a member with a linearly variable cross section, I'm all ears).
Mainly I'm just looking for some fellow structural engineer insight, which I so happily accept on this forum.
Thanks!