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jeffhed
Structural
- Mar 23, 2007
- 286
Our office (only two of us) are having a discussion on residential roof diaphragm design. I have attached a sample drawing of what I am talking about. Say you have a typical house with a nice long wall at the back of the garage you want to use for shear. However, the trusses run perpendicular to this wall so to provide a drag strut would involve blocking and coil strapping. My colleague says you can use the shear wall without a drag strut by limiting the diaphragm length to the length of the wall at the back of the garage as long as the unit shear on the shear wall is lower than the unit shear on the diaphragm. He also says that the collector for the transverse shear wall will also work as the chord for the longitudinal diaphragm. All this makes sense and could be proven with calculations and I have no doubt that the demand on the diaphragm would be well within the ability of a standard residential diaphragm. I agree the diaphragm he proposes will be strong enough to support the load, but I am unsure of how the remaining portion of the home ties into the diaphragm without a collector. My colleague says that the roof sheathing is all staggered and nailed and the rest of the home just goes along for the ride. This is the part I'm having a hard time accepting, especially for tension drag loads, which is why I say if you use the shear wall at the back of the garage for the longitudinal direction, you need a drag strut or at the very minimum blocking and edge nailing with coil strap out into the diaphragm a sufficient amount to develop your drag force into the adjacent diaphragm. What are others thoughts on this? Can you just rely on the sheathing and the nailing along the left hand side to go along for the ride? Or should a collector be provided. I realize residential loading typically is very low, however, this also can be a problem on large residential projects as well as commercial where loads are higher, but providing a drag strut the full length of the building would cause additional costs that may not be required.