dengebre
Structural
- Jun 21, 2006
- 49
For multi-story wood buildings, I have very often seen the wall studs spaced at 16” o.c. and the trusses spaced at 24” o.c. The trusses bear on a double top plate across the top of the wall studs. This typical configuration will result in every other truss bearing at midspan between the wall studs (the top plates behave as a beam over multiple supports). When analyzed as a built-up member, the double top plates are adequate for both flexure and shear. However, in order to behave as a built-up member, the plates must be fastened together so that they satisfy shear flow, VQ/I. Every time I perform this calculation the result is multiple 10d nails at a prohibitively tight spacing. What am I missing here? Trusses at 24” o.c. on a double top plate on studs at 16” o.c. seems to be common practice, but it does not appear to work.