Lion06
Structural
- Nov 17, 2006
- 4,238
I am sure many of you watch all of the home improvement shows (either by choice or force). I often see people just adding sliding patio doors or french doors out onto a new deck where there was only exterior wall.
Obviously a header is sized for this application.
The question I have is regarding the lateral resistance of the house. I have never seen any of these shows make any mention of the lateral system. How does one go about determining if the wall you are about to cut a 6'x8' hole in is a shearwall?? I would expect that whoever designed the house would have used every exterior wall of the house (solid walls, and solid panels between walls) as a shearwall in an effort to get the unit shear on each wall as low as possible.
That being said, if you start cutting holes in those shearwalls and making them essentially worthless, it seems to me that someone should be verifying this is acceptable rather than simply sizing a header for vertical loads.
Can someone tell me if I am missing something?
Obviously a header is sized for this application.
The question I have is regarding the lateral resistance of the house. I have never seen any of these shows make any mention of the lateral system. How does one go about determining if the wall you are about to cut a 6'x8' hole in is a shearwall?? I would expect that whoever designed the house would have used every exterior wall of the house (solid walls, and solid panels between walls) as a shearwall in an effort to get the unit shear on each wall as low as possible.
That being said, if you start cutting holes in those shearwalls and making them essentially worthless, it seems to me that someone should be verifying this is acceptable rather than simply sizing a header for vertical loads.
Can someone tell me if I am missing something?