Greenalleycat
Structural
- Jul 12, 2021
- 608
I'm dealing with a pretty common scenario in residential alterations: putting in a new timber beam that terminates at the perimeter walls
Obviously I can use steel and avoid this problem, but timber is significantly more preferred in alterations for the flexibility and ease of connecting existing structure to it
The problem is that my beam is 300mm deep in the middle and I have somewhere between 90mm and 150mm depth (TBC) at the perimeter due to the roof line closing that gap down
Pic below for reference
Notching beams absolutely destroys shear strength - using a notch calculation I don't even get close to working
So the question is: is tapering a beam the same as notching it?
Our code has a really shitty section on this that only has moment calculations from tapered beams, and only if the slope of the taper is less than 10 degrees
It has no wording on a >10 degree taper or on shear strength...so I'm not sure where that kicks us to
Anyone got any thoughts on the effects of taper vs notch on timber beam shear strength?
Obviously I can use steel and avoid this problem, but timber is significantly more preferred in alterations for the flexibility and ease of connecting existing structure to it
The problem is that my beam is 300mm deep in the middle and I have somewhere between 90mm and 150mm depth (TBC) at the perimeter due to the roof line closing that gap down
Pic below for reference

Notching beams absolutely destroys shear strength - using a notch calculation I don't even get close to working
So the question is: is tapering a beam the same as notching it?
Our code has a really shitty section on this that only has moment calculations from tapered beams, and only if the slope of the taper is less than 10 degrees
It has no wording on a >10 degree taper or on shear strength...so I'm not sure where that kicks us to
Anyone got any thoughts on the effects of taper vs notch on timber beam shear strength?