jseymour
Active member
I'll try to keep the back-story as short as possible and get to the questions.
We have an over-sized two-car garage, measuring 23 ft. by 23 ft. attached to the house. It's a ranch house with a hip roof. The garage roof is also a hip roof.
We knew something had been going on with the garage for years. Finally figured it out last spring: The roof was pushing the walls out. Near as we can tell, the original owner expanded the garage from 1-1/2 cars to its current size, and they put in only half the rafter ties they should have. Nor did they put collar ties on every rafter.
By the time I figured this out it was at the point that one good snow load probably would have brought the whole thing down. A contractor wanted $8-$9 thousand to fix it. A number of construction types, incl. an acquaintance that once built garages said "Nonsense. You can fix this yourself."
So I am.
Over the past five months I've been gradually pulling the the walls in using front-to-back and side-to-side cables and come-alongs, plus a column with a jack screw pushing the far end of the ridge board up.
I'm nearly there. Except for a slight bulge in the top of the middle of the back wall (the rafter tie there had literally come loose!), the walls now appear straight and plumb. Checking the wall studs with a level, the bubble is between the lines in all but that one spot--where that mild bulge remains. The ridge board isn't level, but it's not too bad.
I've a stack of 2x6's for additional rafter ties ready to go in once I've got the walls where I want them. Which leads me to my questions.
1. How to best fasten the new rafter ties to their rafters? I purchased a framing nailer for this purpose, but I've seen it suggested I should through-bolt them?
2. Should I install hurricane ties to the rafters before installing the new, additional rafter ties?
3. Anybody got any tricks-of-the-trade for getting the new rafter ties in, in existing construction, being as the roof constrains my maneuvring room?
Thanks in advance!
We have an over-sized two-car garage, measuring 23 ft. by 23 ft. attached to the house. It's a ranch house with a hip roof. The garage roof is also a hip roof.
We knew something had been going on with the garage for years. Finally figured it out last spring: The roof was pushing the walls out. Near as we can tell, the original owner expanded the garage from 1-1/2 cars to its current size, and they put in only half the rafter ties they should have. Nor did they put collar ties on every rafter.
By the time I figured this out it was at the point that one good snow load probably would have brought the whole thing down. A contractor wanted $8-$9 thousand to fix it. A number of construction types, incl. an acquaintance that once built garages said "Nonsense. You can fix this yourself."
So I am.
Over the past five months I've been gradually pulling the the walls in using front-to-back and side-to-side cables and come-alongs, plus a column with a jack screw pushing the far end of the ridge board up.
I'm nearly there. Except for a slight bulge in the top of the middle of the back wall (the rafter tie there had literally come loose!), the walls now appear straight and plumb. Checking the wall studs with a level, the bubble is between the lines in all but that one spot--where that mild bulge remains. The ridge board isn't level, but it's not too bad.
I've a stack of 2x6's for additional rafter ties ready to go in once I've got the walls where I want them. Which leads me to my questions.
1. How to best fasten the new rafter ties to their rafters? I purchased a framing nailer for this purpose, but I've seen it suggested I should through-bolt them?
2. Should I install hurricane ties to the rafters before installing the new, additional rafter ties?
3. Anybody got any tricks-of-the-trade for getting the new rafter ties in, in existing construction, being as the roof constrains my maneuvring room?
Thanks in advance!

Fixed.