Looking good!
Btw, the truss spacing looks fine to me, assuming the trusses are designed for that spacing. That's the thing that many aren't aware of when they say "looks like a big space between trusses!".... Today's modern trusses are designed for many things, including wider spaces, so the application in your building looks very much like what I would see on many buildings when I was in the industry.
Edit: We built many buildings with a "skip truss" design to allow additional headroom for car lifts. In these engineered designs, two beefed up trusses would be used in conjunction with beefed up purlins to allow the middle truss in the span to be eliminated. Therefore, the height up to the roof line was available. We would center this 16 foot "high headroom" area at a garage door bay so that the car enthusiast could have his lift, and keep his wife happy by having a shorter overall sidewall and building. Just an example.
As far as pitch, most areas have a "standard" that is the default used in most situations based on typical snow loads and other factors. Here in PA, 4 pitch is that standard, although many prefer more pitch for aesthetic reasons. Yours looks to me like a 4 pitch (just guessing by eye) and doesn't look particularly low pitch or concerning to me. Just my opinion, but I think you're in good shape.
Looking good!
Btw, the truss spacing looks fine to me, assuming the trusses are designed for that spacing. That's the thing that many aren't aware of when they say "looks like a big space between trusses!".... Today's modern trusses are designed for many things, including wider spaces, so the application in your building looks very much like what I would see on many buildings when I was in the industry.
Edit: We built many buildings with a "skip truss" design to allow additional headroom for car lifts. In these engineered designs, two beefed up trusses would be used in conjunction with beefed up purlins to allow the middle truss in the span to be eliminated. Therefore, the height up to the roof line was available. We would center this 16 foot "high headroom" area at a garage door bay so that the car enthusiast could have his lift, and keep his wife happy by having a shorter overall sidewall and building. Just an example.
As far as pitch, most areas have a "standard" that is the default used in most situations based on typical snow loads and other factors. Here in PA, 4 pitch is that standard, although many prefer more pitch for aesthetic reasons. Yours looks to me like a 4 pitch (just guessing by eye) and doesn't look particularly low pitch or concerning to me. Just my opinion, but I think you're in good shape.
This may be true, but around me there have been several barn roof collapses this winter and about 90% of them have had the wider spaced trusses. what failed was not the trusses so much as the roof perlins failing. just food for thought.
Bought this desk on CL. Made in Corry PA, kind of cool as I was born and raised in Erie PA. Weird to find something from so close to home in Indiana. The guy threw in that wooden organizer thing since I paid the full $30 and didnt haggle. He was a super nice guy.
https://scontent-a.**.fbcdn.net/hphotos-prn2/t1.0-9/10359529_10202454893869917_4487549707311919247_n.jpg