Hauled some plywood and foam sheeting home on Friday in my Nissan Leaf... haha
Try to save burning fuel in my diesel trucks whenever I can...
R-32 for the EPS filled 8.25" thick SIP panel. Out of that 8.25" total is an inner and outer layer of 7/16" osb. Obviously that is a nice amt. of insulation to have in your walls... but I'm sure where the building system really shines is the lack of thermal bridging and overall air tightness. Foam or panel adhesive goes between every two 'parts' that get connected. I'm even gluing the entire stick built front wall together. Dimensional to dimensional and dimensional to sheathing etc.

That "home made" beam is AWESOME ! The only downside would hanging anything off of the face of that beam, like a typical joist hanger. Hangers that go "over" the top would probably work just fine as long as they attach into the top of the I joist.Worked on building the overhead door headers this afternoon. Using up some 2x10 (1.5" x 9.5") sized Ijoists I have been saving for quite a few years... I glued and ring nailed 4 of them together with 5/8 plywood to achieve a 7-1/4" thickness matching the 2x8 stick built front wall. Layered within' them polyiso insulation in 1" and 1/2" variants. I assume (please chime in) this will provide adequate support for the roof above the 10'x10' overhead doors.
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Buddy Bill wearing out the caulk gun...
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I am just learning about SIPS and if I ever build I WILL use them !
From reading, I notice there is a choice of splines that can be used. From simply "letting in" a 4-6" wide piece of OSB immediately behind the "skin" OSB, to a full SIP spline to single or double "2 by".
What are you using and why ? (Or am I over thinking this issue ?)
I can't wait to see you setting the roof !

From reading, I notice there is a choice of splines that can be used. From simply "letting in" a 4-6" wide piece of OSB immediately behind the "skin" OSB, to a full SIP spline to single or double "2 by".
What are you using and why ? (Or am I over thinking this issue ?)
Ready for the rain... I hope.
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Josh
Haha - yes, quite a wide swath of precipitation...

Slathered on some waterproofing for the drain pipe etc.
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My first design had asymmetric trusses. Read all the horror stories about it and decided to raise the floor and make it level.Anyone see anything out of the ordinary with this truss diagram? I've ordered trusses before for my other projects... but am always apprehensive when approving the design because if you miss something, it's not a good time to resolve it when the crane truck is setting them.
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Josh