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2x4 Floor Truss 1

XR250

Structural
Jan 30, 2013
5,391
Just saw an apartment complex being built with 2x4 floor trusses instead of 4x2. - i.e the trusses are 1 1/2" wide with the top and bottom chords having the the 3 1/2" axis oriented vertically. Have never seen a floor truss like this. What is the benefit and/or downsides?
 
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I can't think of any benefits, but if it's engineered for that I don't necessarily see a structural concern.

My first thoughts on downsides:
1. May not be economical due to the orientation of the members as technically there is a difference in stiffness/moment of inertia for same depth members with the centroid of the 2x4's being further apart when flat versus vertical, this could affect floor stiffness/vibrations, but could be eliminated with properly engineered trusses.
2. More difficult to run ducting, electrical and plumbing through the truss, depending on depth maybe not a concern, but normally I see very shallow trusses on apartment complexes.
3. Truss bearing area is less, thereby maybe needed TBE's or sim to achieve bearing, depends on forces, but a 2x vertical has much less are of bearing than a flat member.
 
I don't think there's any mechanical advantage, if anything less due to the smaller distance between the chord areas. Any benefit is likely in the fabrication and shipping.
 
Maybe the webs could be farther apart due to the increases chord stiffness?
 
For us it’s a manufacturing thing. Our machine can only do max 24” depth. Most of the time that’s enough. Anything bigger goes to our regular table. Last year I did a floor with ~4’ depth. There was no reason from a structural viewpoint. Just what the architect had in his head.
 
I had a supplier propose this once. Their explanation was that their tooling couldn't accommodate lumber on its edge on their press table. I'll admit I didn't quite understand why that would be the case, but just went with another supplier who could fabricate the trusses as-normal.
 
I'd echo what Zoobie777 said. I've never seen a floor truss machine that would accommodate a 4X2 truss more than 24" deep.

I have quoted deeper 2X4 floor trusses before. But no one has ever followed through and bought them.
 
Gang nail connection plates would have more "meat" to fasten to with vertical oriented chords and diagonals....that's the only benefit I see.
 
The following reasons are typically the cause:
  • If the truss height exceeds 24 inches, it cannot be manufactured using floor truss equipment.​
  • Balcony trusses that require a step or 1/4'' slope are usually made as 2x4 trusses.​
  • Girder trusses require more plies, and 2x4s are used to better connect plies to plies and support higher loads.​
  • For floor trusses with too long of a span, 2x4s provide a larger plate contact area, which effectively reduces the plate size.​
 

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