msquared48
Structural
- Aug 7, 2007
- 14,745
Got a project where the owner has erected a deck (8' up) with a large roof structure over it without a permit... New situation for allof us, huh?
Anyway, my problem is that he has attached this deck to the existing house with a 2X ledger over 4" bevel siding, over 1/2" fiberboard to a 2X rim joist. This leaves an effective 1" gap to span between the ledger and rim board as the siding and fiberboard are non-structural.
I would like to bridge this gap with either lag screws or thru-bolts as to do otherwise would mean tearing out the whole deck and replacing it. Does anyone have any design guidelines for the bolts, as to capacities in this circumstance for either the lags or thru-bolts?
I would prefer thru-bolts as the inderside of the rimjoist can be exposed to install the bolts as there is a 2' floor joist cantilever from the bearing wall of the story below to the rim joist.
I am thinking of installint an angle that would mount on the backside of the rim joist and extend forward to let the rim joist bear on the angle rather than rely on bolt bending. Themore I think about this detail, the more I like it to avoid the bolt-bending and deflection / prying / bearing problems.
Any thoughts?
Mike McCann
MMC Engineering
Anyway, my problem is that he has attached this deck to the existing house with a 2X ledger over 4" bevel siding, over 1/2" fiberboard to a 2X rim joist. This leaves an effective 1" gap to span between the ledger and rim board as the siding and fiberboard are non-structural.
I would like to bridge this gap with either lag screws or thru-bolts as to do otherwise would mean tearing out the whole deck and replacing it. Does anyone have any design guidelines for the bolts, as to capacities in this circumstance for either the lags or thru-bolts?
I would prefer thru-bolts as the inderside of the rimjoist can be exposed to install the bolts as there is a 2' floor joist cantilever from the bearing wall of the story below to the rim joist.
I am thinking of installint an angle that would mount on the backside of the rim joist and extend forward to let the rim joist bear on the angle rather than rely on bolt bending. Themore I think about this detail, the more I like it to avoid the bolt-bending and deflection / prying / bearing problems.
Any thoughts?
Mike McCann
MMC Engineering