gte447f
Structural
- Dec 1, 2008
- 755
I am designing a building with flat, bottom chord bearing, metal plate connected, wood roof trusses. The truss span is approximately 45 feet. I am thinking the bottom chords will probably be 2x6 oriented in the strong direction.
The bearing walls are wood stud walls with a 2-2x6 top plate. The typical truss bearing elevation on the 2-2x6 top plate is 14'-4-1/2". At the front of the building there is a storefront glazing system with 5-1/2"x11" glulam header beams. The elevation of the top of the beams is working out to be 14'-5-1/2", just 1 inch above the typical truss bearing elevation.
Here is my question. Is a 1" raised bottom chord bearing seat OK and easy to fabricate for metal plate connected wood trusses, or is some other standard dimension better, like for example, is it better to raise the bearing seat by an amount equal to the typical bottom chord dimension (5-1/2" in this case)?
If something other than 1" is desirable, the I think easiest way to adjust the truss bearing elevation will be to add 2x6 nailer plates to the top and/or bottom of the glulam beams.
Hope this makes sense.
The bearing walls are wood stud walls with a 2-2x6 top plate. The typical truss bearing elevation on the 2-2x6 top plate is 14'-4-1/2". At the front of the building there is a storefront glazing system with 5-1/2"x11" glulam header beams. The elevation of the top of the beams is working out to be 14'-5-1/2", just 1 inch above the typical truss bearing elevation.
Here is my question. Is a 1" raised bottom chord bearing seat OK and easy to fabricate for metal plate connected wood trusses, or is some other standard dimension better, like for example, is it better to raise the bearing seat by an amount equal to the typical bottom chord dimension (5-1/2" in this case)?
If something other than 1" is desirable, the I think easiest way to adjust the truss bearing elevation will be to add 2x6 nailer plates to the top and/or bottom of the glulam beams.
Hope this makes sense.