I recently had a similar project except that on one end of the building part of the roof collapsed. The entire roof had been leaking for some time. Obviously we replaced the collapsed portion and the owner wanted us to examine the remaining roof trusses. Be thorough, at first glance the rest of the trusses appeared to be fine. The contractor then took a hammer (claw end) hit one of the trusses that had already partially failed and it was apparent the wood was in bad shape. He then went on to point out that the trusses that looked fine, upon closer inspection had hairline cracks. Then I looked at a chord member that had snapped and the way it broke looked more like low quality metal brittle failure (i.e. no strands, short jagged break). I recommended evacuating the rest of the building until the entire roof could be inspected or replaced. The owner angrily complied saying that I was an alarmist. A few weeks later after a good rain another portion of the roof collapsed. What I am trying to convey here is do not assume the wood material is ok. If it has transformed into what I had on my job, failure could be imminent.
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