kc9508
Structural
- Feb 14, 2016
- 25
We're working on a project that's just in schematic design and the architect wants to look at using glulam beams combined with a 3" metal roof deck (glulam spacing will be about 8'-0" on-center). The framing at the perimeter of the roof will be steel beams, not wood; i.e. the glulams are just the "interior" beams. I'm taking a look at the diaphragm capacity tables which of course are based on support fastener spacing, sidelap spacing, and deck span. It doesn't say specifically in the tables that the deck supports are to be steel. I'm thinking that as long as I specify wood screws with an embedment into the glulam that can develop similar uplift capacities as a tek screw, then the diaphragm shear values should be similar. Based on my understanding, the diaphragm connections are most critical along the perimeter of the roof (where we will have steel) and the diaphragm anchorage to the glulams would be to resist uplift and buckling of "deep beam" diaphragm. Any thoughts on this approach?