TRAK.Structural
Structural
- Dec 27, 2023
- 283
This one is for the timber framing experts out there.
See attachments. I am designing a truss replacement at the gable end of a rectangular gazebo structure. The existing bottom chord of the truss is currently sagging quite a lot due to failure of the connection between the king post and the bottom chord. Additionally a lot of the wood is deteriorating so a full re-frame of the truss has been decided on.
The truss spans about 25 feet clear so the forces in the compression chord and the tension chord are significant (5+ kips, and 4+ kips respectively). I think I'd like to use notches/bearing type connections because these loads seem like a lot for screws and connectors, although I am open to other options that don't involve custom plates that may have a long lead time. To be clear, these are not intended to have mortise/tenon elements, just simple cuts. My questions are below:
1. Can PSL members (the bottom chord) be notched as shown?
2. Seems like the applicable limit states for the notched connection are bearing capacity for the wood, and block shear? Is it that simple or am I missing something?
3. I've seen some diagrams showing the block shear plane drawn like my blue dashed line, is there also a block shear (or other) number to check on the top chord as shown with my red dashed line?
4. I want to have some kind of mechanical connection for additional insurance and any uplift cases, SDS screws seem reasonable here (currently shown on the detail) but are through bolts clamping the two members together a better option?
5. Any guidance on the angle from horizontal that the green line should be?
Feel free to offer other connection ideas and/or let me know if I am totally missing the mark on how this should be configured.
See attachments. I am designing a truss replacement at the gable end of a rectangular gazebo structure. The existing bottom chord of the truss is currently sagging quite a lot due to failure of the connection between the king post and the bottom chord. Additionally a lot of the wood is deteriorating so a full re-frame of the truss has been decided on.
The truss spans about 25 feet clear so the forces in the compression chord and the tension chord are significant (5+ kips, and 4+ kips respectively). I think I'd like to use notches/bearing type connections because these loads seem like a lot for screws and connectors, although I am open to other options that don't involve custom plates that may have a long lead time. To be clear, these are not intended to have mortise/tenon elements, just simple cuts. My questions are below:
1. Can PSL members (the bottom chord) be notched as shown?
2. Seems like the applicable limit states for the notched connection are bearing capacity for the wood, and block shear? Is it that simple or am I missing something?
3. I've seen some diagrams showing the block shear plane drawn like my blue dashed line, is there also a block shear (or other) number to check on the top chord as shown with my red dashed line?
4. I want to have some kind of mechanical connection for additional insurance and any uplift cases, SDS screws seem reasonable here (currently shown on the detail) but are through bolts clamping the two members together a better option?
5. Any guidance on the angle from horizontal that the green line should be?
Feel free to offer other connection ideas and/or let me know if I am totally missing the mark on how this should be configured.