I am looking at a wood roof joist that has failed. The failure looks peculiar, any input would be appreciated.
Here is the situation - This is an old flat roof (~100yrs) over a one story commercial kitchen. There is a large framed opening in the roof, approx. 8'x8', for numerous kitchen hoods and vents etc. The joist in question is a trimmer that frames the opening. To begin with the joist is very undersized as is typical for this type of building, in addition the header is framed into the trimmer with a mortise and tenon joint.
See attached photo. The joist failed in a very clean/brittle manner. The wood around and inside the failure is hard - extremely hard in fact. In the picture you can see that it is black, the owner is saying that this is from smoke in the kitchen but I don't think that's what it is. There is no water or fire damage. There is no splitting of fibers - just a very brittle hard break. (ignore the other framing in the picture, that is ceiling framing)
After this joist failed the adjacent joists partially failed and those look more typical - splitting fibers and clear wood.
I have read that long term exposure to heat can cause a brash failure in joists, could that be what caused this? The joist is directly next to kitchen hoods and vents. What about the blackness - is this some type of fungi that can also cause brittleness? The failure occurred approximately one month ago but this picture is from today.
Any thoughts are appreciated.
Here is the situation - This is an old flat roof (~100yrs) over a one story commercial kitchen. There is a large framed opening in the roof, approx. 8'x8', for numerous kitchen hoods and vents etc. The joist in question is a trimmer that frames the opening. To begin with the joist is very undersized as is typical for this type of building, in addition the header is framed into the trimmer with a mortise and tenon joint.
See attached photo. The joist failed in a very clean/brittle manner. The wood around and inside the failure is hard - extremely hard in fact. In the picture you can see that it is black, the owner is saying that this is from smoke in the kitchen but I don't think that's what it is. There is no water or fire damage. There is no splitting of fibers - just a very brittle hard break. (ignore the other framing in the picture, that is ceiling framing)
After this joist failed the adjacent joists partially failed and those look more typical - splitting fibers and clear wood.
I have read that long term exposure to heat can cause a brash failure in joists, could that be what caused this? The joist is directly next to kitchen hoods and vents. What about the blackness - is this some type of fungi that can also cause brittleness? The failure occurred approximately one month ago but this picture is from today.
Any thoughts are appreciated.