Wood Truss Design Video

By
©1993-2012 Tim Carter

VIDEO SUMMARY

Hi, I'm Tim Carter and I'm at a new construction site in New Hampshire. It's a frosty morning. But I have an opportunity show you a very unique truss design. Look at this.

Here's a nice new truss that's actually for the garage of this home. Most trusses you see the rafter come down and meet the bottom chord, but look at this funny design. Here's the bottom chord but it takes a turn and runs down to the wall. You might ask why this design?

Looking across the bottom of the trusses, the garage door opening is on the other end. You can see a narrow rectangle formed by a piece of 2x4 above the garage door. Here in the Northeast, it is very common to have transom windows. This is a very neat architectural feature. These windows allow a lot of light to enter into the garage. Because they went with extra tall doors and there is a transom above it, you have to be able raise the bottom of the trusses up. This will allow the transom windows to be below the ceiling.

If you can dream it with the truss or its shape, normally the truss fabricator can create.

Your Facebook friends would love to know how this column helped you solve your problem. Type a quick comment of what you discovered here at AsktheBuilder.com. Thanks!

COMMENTS

No comments yet

     View all comments
*Name:
Email:
Notify me about new comments on this page
Hide my email
*Text:
Security Image:

Visual CAPTCHA


 
Remember, Tim Carter doesn't answer questions here in the comments. You need to go to the Ask Tim page.
 




Have a Suggestion?
Do it right, not over!

Ask the Builder Comment Help

Thanks for stopping by! The Comments Section of my AsktheBuilder.com website is a place for you to share stories about how you've solved a similar problem at your home or carry on a conversation with other visitors. I tried, at the beginning, to be part of the conversation, but there were too many questions being asked and it was impossible for me to keep up and get my regular work finished each day.

If you want to ask me a direct question, you should go to the Ask Tim page of this website.

Helpful Comment Tips: If you need help with a problem, please try these things now before you type in a comment. You could discover your answer in just minutes.
Don't show this alert again.