Well, I finally started my garage build. This is a 28x28 detached garage next to my house. I have been planning this for a few months and finally decided to do it. I have never built anything to this scale but am an engineer by trade so feel that has definatly (destroyed all chance of making this easy) help me. I will post pics shortly to help out.
For a little back ground:
I dug the footings, poured the footings and blocked 2' up for a foundation. The garage has 2 single car doors framed in 8'x10'.
I framed 10' walls on top of the block for a final inside height of roughly 12'. Everything is 2x4's except the engineered trusses.
For a timeline, I framed 3 walls up and sheathed them in a day. Braced the structure off and set the trusses the next day, and the 3rd day added more brace and started on the front build. I didn't build the front of the garage yet because I had to set the trusses. I thought it would make placing the truss easier, which it did, but made building the front wall a chore!
Problems:
1. The front block foundation has a center support between the two doors. I guess the mason didn't exactly level and true the block because when I was leveling the wall to the roof truss, I cracked the mortar seam and basically pulled the block apart. Now there is a 1/16" gap on one side on the block joint.
2. Will I ever get enough X-bracing and support to take out all the movement? It's driving me nuts when I'm standing up inside the attic area and I can sway the building in one direction slightly.
3. I measured the total length of my garage and divided the space into 15 section (22.5" OC). Marked the location for the roof trusses and set them there. I didn't just lay them out 24" OC. Now when the sheathing is applied I'm sure some seams aren't going to meet at the truss. Is this a problem? I have small OSB hurricane type clips to use between the joints.
4. The final problem, or chore will be building the overhangs. I an notching the gable ends 36" apart and running a 2x4 to the next truss back. I hope this is enough support for the 2' overhang.
Any hints or opinions would be greatly appreciated.
For a little back ground:
I dug the footings, poured the footings and blocked 2' up for a foundation. The garage has 2 single car doors framed in 8'x10'.
I framed 10' walls on top of the block for a final inside height of roughly 12'. Everything is 2x4's except the engineered trusses.
For a timeline, I framed 3 walls up and sheathed them in a day. Braced the structure off and set the trusses the next day, and the 3rd day added more brace and started on the front build. I didn't build the front of the garage yet because I had to set the trusses. I thought it would make placing the truss easier, which it did, but made building the front wall a chore!
Problems:
1. The front block foundation has a center support between the two doors. I guess the mason didn't exactly level and true the block because when I was leveling the wall to the roof truss, I cracked the mortar seam and basically pulled the block apart. Now there is a 1/16" gap on one side on the block joint.
2. Will I ever get enough X-bracing and support to take out all the movement? It's driving me nuts when I'm standing up inside the attic area and I can sway the building in one direction slightly.
3. I measured the total length of my garage and divided the space into 15 section (22.5" OC). Marked the location for the roof trusses and set them there. I didn't just lay them out 24" OC. Now when the sheathing is applied I'm sure some seams aren't going to meet at the truss. Is this a problem? I have small OSB hurricane type clips to use between the joints.
4. The final problem, or chore will be building the overhangs. I an notching the gable ends 36" apart and running a 2x4 to the next truss back. I hope this is enough support for the 2' overhang.
Any hints or opinions would be greatly appreciated.

