Rubberdown
Well-known member
Hey all,
I recently moved in with my mother in law to help take care of her. Alzheimer's ***** and that's all I have to say about that. The garage ceiling joists had been decked with 1/4 inch plywood, and about 500000000000000 lbs of **** had been thrown up there in addition to filling up the garage. At somepoint someone realized their folly, and had shoved some notched 4x4 posts in the middle to shore things up.
I have cleaned everything out and its empty up there. My question is, how to best deal with these saggy ceiling joists. They are 2x6x22 (give or take on length) on 2 foot centers. The ends have been tapered to match the slope of the roof. Looking at any sort of span table these just wouldn't do with no load. I should mention that these are not trusses or anything, and the roof structure is in no way attached to these.
The options I see without doing an unreasonable amount of work on a house that isn't mine are:
1. Replace with 2x6 like was originally framed
2. replace with 2x8 or 2x10 or 2x10. That would require me replacing ALL joists and temporarily removing stiff backs, etc. The problem I run into is I have always worked with the rough understanding don't cut more than a quarter of the board off, within the width of the board.
(example, you can cut 4 inches off the edge of a 2x12 within 12 inches of the end) So to fit a 2x12 under the existing decking I would have to cut about 5 inches to 8 inches off depending on the slope of the roof. That doesn't follow the rule. I MAY be able to get away with a 2x8 but that doesn't seem like it meets the span table that I looked at.
What do you guys suggest? Half of me says its not my house, screw it and put back what was there and don't complicate your life. Lets be honest more than half of me is saying that.
I recently moved in with my mother in law to help take care of her. Alzheimer's ***** and that's all I have to say about that. The garage ceiling joists had been decked with 1/4 inch plywood, and about 500000000000000 lbs of **** had been thrown up there in addition to filling up the garage. At somepoint someone realized their folly, and had shoved some notched 4x4 posts in the middle to shore things up.
I have cleaned everything out and its empty up there. My question is, how to best deal with these saggy ceiling joists. They are 2x6x22 (give or take on length) on 2 foot centers. The ends have been tapered to match the slope of the roof. Looking at any sort of span table these just wouldn't do with no load. I should mention that these are not trusses or anything, and the roof structure is in no way attached to these.
The options I see without doing an unreasonable amount of work on a house that isn't mine are:
1. Replace with 2x6 like was originally framed
2. replace with 2x8 or 2x10 or 2x10. That would require me replacing ALL joists and temporarily removing stiff backs, etc. The problem I run into is I have always worked with the rough understanding don't cut more than a quarter of the board off, within the width of the board.
(example, you can cut 4 inches off the edge of a 2x12 within 12 inches of the end) So to fit a 2x12 under the existing decking I would have to cut about 5 inches to 8 inches off depending on the slope of the roof. That doesn't follow the rule. I MAY be able to get away with a 2x8 but that doesn't seem like it meets the span table that I looked at.
What do you guys suggest? Half of me says its not my house, screw it and put back what was there and don't complicate your life. Lets be honest more than half of me is saying that.
