BurtEggley
Well-known member
- Joined
- Oct 8, 2024
- Messages
- 882
have a 25 year old Tuff shed that needs new siding. A couple questions
1) what siding is best these days? This one is plywood backed like T1-11 but the exterior is like a pressed finish.
2) We hang things from the roof supports. It is build like a truss but without the bottom rafter tying it together. As a result the roof has sagged a little in the middle, which I suspect will be the walls have pushed out a little although it is not noticeable except the roof. I want to brace the walls so they are parallel the same as if they had been built with a full truss. But I do not want to take the roof off and redo the whole thing with trusses. So I thought I would use a come along to pull the walls back in if they are bowed, and then brace it from happening again with 2x4s spanning between walls. The issue is tying them into existing construction. If they go under the top plate then they would end up nailed to the studs and top plate and reinforced with some kind of Simpson tie. They could also be cut to fit against the roof supports, and nailed into them making some kind of truss. What I want to avoid is the pressure splitting wood over time. There is no room to lay them on top of the top plate like a true truss would have been. Anyone been here and how did you solve the issue? One alternative would be to sandwich each existing roof 2x4 with a pair of 2x4 rafters spanning the walls, then glue and nail them together while the come along is holding the walls back to parallel. That way the nails or bolts could penetrate all three 2x4s. But that seems like over kill for a 10 x 12 shed that just has odds and ends hanging from screw hooks - leaf blower, 5 gallon bucket with spare PVC fittings, sprayers, 5 gallon buckets with misc drip irrigation fittings in them etc.. I am afraid that trying to use a Simpson tie and just angle nailing them to the internal side of the top plate won't hold because they will be in tension.
1) what siding is best these days? This one is plywood backed like T1-11 but the exterior is like a pressed finish.
2) We hang things from the roof supports. It is build like a truss but without the bottom rafter tying it together. As a result the roof has sagged a little in the middle, which I suspect will be the walls have pushed out a little although it is not noticeable except the roof. I want to brace the walls so they are parallel the same as if they had been built with a full truss. But I do not want to take the roof off and redo the whole thing with trusses. So I thought I would use a come along to pull the walls back in if they are bowed, and then brace it from happening again with 2x4s spanning between walls. The issue is tying them into existing construction. If they go under the top plate then they would end up nailed to the studs and top plate and reinforced with some kind of Simpson tie. They could also be cut to fit against the roof supports, and nailed into them making some kind of truss. What I want to avoid is the pressure splitting wood over time. There is no room to lay them on top of the top plate like a true truss would have been. Anyone been here and how did you solve the issue? One alternative would be to sandwich each existing roof 2x4 with a pair of 2x4 rafters spanning the walls, then glue and nail them together while the come along is holding the walls back to parallel. That way the nails or bolts could penetrate all three 2x4s. But that seems like over kill for a 10 x 12 shed that just has odds and ends hanging from screw hooks - leaf blower, 5 gallon bucket with spare PVC fittings, sprayers, 5 gallon buckets with misc drip irrigation fittings in them etc.. I am afraid that trying to use a Simpson tie and just angle nailing them to the internal side of the top plate won't hold because they will be in tension.


