gte447f
Structural
- Dec 1, 2008
- 755
See the attached images. I came across this cracked floor joist in a the crawl space of a single family residential building. It's the joist just to the left of the HVAC duct and just to the right of the plugged foundation vent. Any ideas what has caused the crack?
This is the only joist that exhibited cracking like this, so maybe it's a one-off, something simple like it was damaged during construction (40 years old).
Is it a typical shear parallel to grain failure? If so, why just this one joist under normal service loads?
There is some relative lateral displacement of the sections above and below the crack and in one of the photos you can see that the joist looks to be leaning over. So is the crack resulted from rollover at the end of the joist? Maybe the joist isn't fastened to the band joist to prevent rollover, but the top edge is being restrained from rolling over by connection to the floor sheathing?
This is the only joist that exhibited cracking like this, so maybe it's a one-off, something simple like it was damaged during construction (40 years old).
Is it a typical shear parallel to grain failure? If so, why just this one joist under normal service loads?
There is some relative lateral displacement of the sections above and below the crack and in one of the photos you can see that the joist looks to be leaning over. So is the crack resulted from rollover at the end of the joist? Maybe the joist isn't fastened to the band joist to prevent rollover, but the top edge is being restrained from rolling over by connection to the floor sheathing?




