JamesW84
Well-known member
32x64 stick frame with 18' walls. The pointy thing on the left of the building is actually a 17' wide lean-to, I just didn't get it all put in the drawing. I originally wanted 12' wide doors, so I had the stem walls poured with 12'3" wide openings. Got it framed and most of the trusses up and a strong wind blew it down, so now I'm back to the drawing board before I begin again.
I have a building permit. My plans were simple 2x6 studs 16" o.c.
Left side is the old way. Right side has the 5' shear walls on each end.
After some research and reading about shear walls, I've found that my tall 64' long wall (the high side on my mono slope will be basically 28 feet from the ground to the top of the roof on that side), will make it difficult for the short walls to hold it with a strong wind.
The recommended ratio for a segmented shear wall is 2:1 (18 ft wall = 9 ft of shear per section), but it can be stretched to 3.5:1 with reductions in shear value.
That being said, a guy a work who knows a lot of framers said that I don't need to worry about any of that and I can just run a bunch of braces from wall to wall and diagonally and I'll be fine. The problem is that with a 32" wide section, The angle of the 2x6 brace nailed to the outside of the studs is at like a 70 degree angle, which 45-60 degree angles are recommended.
This is what he's talking about:
Would you do like he's saying or do the 5' shear walls, plywood inside and out with blocks and reduce the 12' wide doors to 10'?
I really want the 12' wide doors, but I don't want my building to collapse.
An engineer wants $2250 for plans. Another said around $1000, but never got back to me with a full proposal. I've studied enough that I'm confident I know what the engineer will say.
I think I'd like to avoid Steel, but if I have to hire an engineer, I might consider steel to make my doors 12' wide.
I have a building permit. My plans were simple 2x6 studs 16" o.c.
Left side is the old way. Right side has the 5' shear walls on each end.
After some research and reading about shear walls, I've found that my tall 64' long wall (the high side on my mono slope will be basically 28 feet from the ground to the top of the roof on that side), will make it difficult for the short walls to hold it with a strong wind.
The recommended ratio for a segmented shear wall is 2:1 (18 ft wall = 9 ft of shear per section), but it can be stretched to 3.5:1 with reductions in shear value.
That being said, a guy a work who knows a lot of framers said that I don't need to worry about any of that and I can just run a bunch of braces from wall to wall and diagonally and I'll be fine. The problem is that with a 32" wide section, The angle of the 2x6 brace nailed to the outside of the studs is at like a 70 degree angle, which 45-60 degree angles are recommended.
This is what he's talking about:
Would you do like he's saying or do the 5' shear walls, plywood inside and out with blocks and reduce the 12' wide doors to 10'?
I really want the 12' wide doors, but I don't want my building to collapse.
An engineer wants $2250 for plans. Another said around $1000, but never got back to me with a full proposal. I've studied enough that I'm confident I know what the engineer will say.
I think I'd like to avoid Steel, but if I have to hire an engineer, I might consider steel to make my doors 12' wide.
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