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Cold formed steel solid blocking at deck edge

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milkshakelake

Structural
Jul 15, 2013
1,176
Quick one. Does anybody else do this? Simple yes/no is fine. Note that I use regular bridging at 8'-0" OC. This is additional solid blocking at edges only.

I've been using this for years because I saw someone else use it. I don't see any point to it, so I'm planning to stop using it.

Screenshot_2022-09-23_162105_hqdanu.png
 
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typically use the edge blocking to get the wall below horizontal reaction up into the diaphragm, otherwise your tasking the CFS Beam with that reaction and associated torsion.

I'm making a thing: (It's no Kootware and it will probably break but it's alive!)
 
@Celt83 Good point. But I don't see that being done with wood, which would presumably be weaker. That being said, if the beam is okay in torsion and horizontal shear, this should still work.
 
Really, I've never seen an exterior wood wall detail that didn't have blocking at least at 48" o.c. for two or three truss bays

I'm making a thing: (It's no Kootware and it will probably break but it's alive!)
 
MSL said:
Does anybody else do this?

I do this. It doesn't have to be three blocking spaces necessarily but I think that one needs some way to drag the out of plan loads on low the studs into the floor diaphragm.
 
MSL said:
But I don't see that being done with wood, which would presumably be weaker.

Yeah, I wouldn't use conventional wood construction practice as your benchmark for high achievement structural detailing.
 
Got it. Thanks folks, this answers my question completely!
 
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