bigal40
Structural
- Nov 9, 2011
- 2
I have been creating assessment reports for exterior balconies here in California. I see a lot of floor joist cantilevered to create balconies. The problem is the framing is Douglas-Fir (not pressure treated or decay resistant). Over time the cantilevered portion of joist decays and the owners hire contractors to create a fix. The repair I see over and over is sistering new pressure treated joist onto the existing decayed joist, but without a back span(no one wants to tear into the interior to run the sistered joist back). I have most recently seen a "reputable large contractor" cut the DF joist back and use screws and or lag bolts to attach a ledger into the end grain of the existing joist (the far exterior end is then supported with a beam and posts). These both seem like really bad connections. The sistering fix must resist the bending moment through the screws ( I've yet to see some supporting calcs when there is an engineer involved) and the ledger fix relies on the exposed end grain of non decay resistant wood. I think the code requires a reduction of (Ceg=0.67) to take into account for the end grain connection being weaker...but still, even if it does calc out now, shouldn't we be concerned that this design relies on the end grain of existing non-decay resisting joist? We have a lot of fog in our area and the moisture in the air often wicks into the end grain and results in decay. Despite my concerns the contractor is continuing to build this way with cost as a justification and has seemed to have found an engineer to sign off on these type of fixes. Does anyone have any experience with these types of connections or know of any resources that may shed some more light on this issue? The NDS and my timber manuals don't seem to address these type of connections....I suspect because they are no good.
I've attached some pictures for clarification.
Thanks in advance for any input. I've enjoyed this site for many years!
I've attached some pictures for clarification.
Thanks in advance for any input. I've enjoyed this site for many years!