Truss Strength

   / Truss Strength #11  
That must be why so many trusses specify that they don't reach rated load capacity unless you hang thousands of pounds of drywall from the bottom of them.
The weight of a ceiling etc., etc...is considered "dead load" NOT live load...and dead load is figured into the size of the gusset plates...Also with a sheetrock etc. ceiling the weight is distributed quite evenly across the (generally 2') span where applicable...with the spacing cited by the OP...there is no way to realistically distribute loads to more than a single truss...
 
   / Truss Strength #12  
The weight of a ceiling etc., etc...is considered "dead load" NOT live load...and dead load is figured into the size of the gusset plates...Also with a sheetrock etc. ceiling the weight is distributed quite evenly across the (generally 2') span where applicable...with the spacing cited by the OP...there is no way to realistically distribute loads to more than a single truss...


You said:

...over time, even a minor load on a single unfortified truss member will cause it to sag...

Usual is 10psf dead load on the bottom chord. That is over twice what is needed to carry 5/8" standard weight drywall and full insulation. Hardly a minor load and trusses are designed to not sag under that load.

Heavier you load a truss the less likely the bottom chord will sag, it is a tension member and wants to be tensioned.
 
   / Truss Strength #13  
You said:

You said:

Quote Originally Posted by /pine View Post
...over time, even a minor load on a single unfortified truss member will cause it to sag...
Usual is 10psf dead load on the bottom chord. That is over twice what is needed to carry 5/8" standard weight drywall and full insulation. Hardly a minor load and trusses are designed to not sag under that load.

Heavier you load a truss the less likely the bottom chord will sag, it is a tension member and wants to be tensioned.

What I said was: "...unless specified when the trusses were built...the bottom chords are not designed to carry any live loads..."

As I said before it's all about the size of the gusset plates...except on dinky little trusses you rarely see single member bottom chords...it's all about the plates that hold the members together...

S.F. dead load factors are generally calculated for an equally distributed area...with usually no less than 2' centers...
 
   / Truss Strength #14  
I'm not talking about live loads in any way shape or form. I'm addressing that you said "minor" loads cause a truss to sag, they don't.

Gusset plates have nothing to do with it, they are part of the design and therefore part of the rating for the truss.

I'm also not saying anything about the spacing, that again has nothing to do with the rating since it is part of the truss package.
 
   / Truss Strength #15  
I'm not talking about live loads in any way shape or form. I'm addressing that you said "minor" loads cause a truss to sag, they don't.

Gusset plates have nothing to do with it, they are part of the design and therefore part of the rating for the truss.

I'm also not saying anything about the spacing, that again has nothing to do with the rating since it is part of the truss package.

For the sake of your pathetically ignorant argument you continue to misrepresent what I have stated...Here is what I said: "...over time, even a minor load on a single unfortified truss member will cause it to sag..." this was in the context of live loads...Doh!

Another factor is trusses have a camber built into the bottoms to allow for natural and imposed forces (loads)...the weight of the truss itself will cause it to sag "over time"...!
 
   / Truss Strength #17  
For the sake of your pathetically ignorant argument you continue to misrepresent what I have stated...Here is what I said: "...over time, even a minor load on a single unfortified truss member will cause it to sag..." this was in the context of live loads...Doh!

Another factor is trusses have a camber built into the bottoms to allow for natural and imposed forces (loads)...the weight of the truss itself will cause it to sag "over time"...!



Exactly how much time do you think he's going to spend sitting on his trusses? Your point is absurd. You will not deform a truss using it to hold the weight of a worker while constructing the building, not a wood truss anyway, which is what the OP shows in his picture. If you think that your "live load" scenario is going to deform a truss then you have no experience building and no engineering background, your claim is baseless in the extreme.

Come off it already, you are simply wrong, you made a point that was silly, just admit it and move on.
 
   / Truss Strength #18  
You said:



Usual is 10psf dead load on the bottom chord. That is over twice what is needed to carry 5/8" standard weight drywall and full insulation. Hardly a minor load and trusses are designed to not sag under that load.

Heavier you load a truss the less likely the bottom chord will sag, it is a tension member and wants to be tensioned.

:thumbsup::D

You mean it holds the walls together and upright with proper bracing!

Always liked figuring out the stresses in truss members. ( log table, slide rule days ) might even have gotten one right on a test!
 
   / Truss Strength #19  
:thumbsup::D

You mean it holds the walls together and upright with proper bracing!

Always liked figuring out the stresses in truss members. ( log table, slide rule days ) might even have gotten one right on a test!


Yes, they do that very well.:thumbsup:
 
   / Truss Strength #20  
I remember when we had our shop built, the salesman wanted to sell us an uplift on the pricing to include some bottom loading in case we wanted it. I declined.. wish I had opt'd for it on a couple of trusses to let me use them to lift things into lofts.
 

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