ben5243
Active member
Hi all,
I apologize as this isn't 100% garage related but I wasn't sure where else to find a collection of folks knowledgeable about these sorts of things... maybe we can just pretend this is in the garage?
Bought the house a year ago, first house. This was missed in the home inspection unfortunately. When someone installed the original wood stove they cut both top and bottom cords of the engineered roof truss to avoid using offsets in the stove pipe and save a few hundred bucks. I estimate this was done at some point in the 80s. The house was built in 75. The bracing they did is structurally useless.
The stove has since been replaced right after we moved in and the same location was used. But I still have this hanging over my head at night. (like literally... I sleep under the other side of this truss)
I 100% know I will need a structural engineer on this and have contacted several already but they are all swamped into February and don't seem interested. No one will comment on how big of a project this will be and I'm going crazy wondering if this is going to cost a small fortune to fix or if it will be a simple task of just bracing what is already there and moving the stove pipe over with offsets.
I doubt anyone will find this useful but the trusses are fink type, all 2x4, 24ft span, 24inch o.c. with a 4/12 pitch.
Is anyone familiar with this stuff or have experience dealing with broken or cut truss members that can share their story? I want to get started remodeling that closet and expand a bathroom and build a chase around the new stove pipe but too afraid to move any walls right now and afraid the budget will be blown out of the water by this.
Anyway... here's one of the many surprises left for us by the previous owners:
Here's the current state which I imagine will need offsets to move it between the trusses
(The reason I cut out such a large piece of drywall in the first place was to remove about 50 lbs of bird nesting material built up around the original stove pipe)
I apologize as this isn't 100% garage related but I wasn't sure where else to find a collection of folks knowledgeable about these sorts of things... maybe we can just pretend this is in the garage?
Bought the house a year ago, first house. This was missed in the home inspection unfortunately. When someone installed the original wood stove they cut both top and bottom cords of the engineered roof truss to avoid using offsets in the stove pipe and save a few hundred bucks. I estimate this was done at some point in the 80s. The house was built in 75. The bracing they did is structurally useless.
The stove has since been replaced right after we moved in and the same location was used. But I still have this hanging over my head at night. (like literally... I sleep under the other side of this truss)
I 100% know I will need a structural engineer on this and have contacted several already but they are all swamped into February and don't seem interested. No one will comment on how big of a project this will be and I'm going crazy wondering if this is going to cost a small fortune to fix or if it will be a simple task of just bracing what is already there and moving the stove pipe over with offsets.
I doubt anyone will find this useful but the trusses are fink type, all 2x4, 24ft span, 24inch o.c. with a 4/12 pitch.
Is anyone familiar with this stuff or have experience dealing with broken or cut truss members that can share their story? I want to get started remodeling that closet and expand a bathroom and build a chase around the new stove pipe but too afraid to move any walls right now and afraid the budget will be blown out of the water by this.
Anyway... here's one of the many surprises left for us by the previous owners:
Here's the current state which I imagine will need offsets to move it between the trusses
(The reason I cut out such a large piece of drywall in the first place was to remove about 50 lbs of bird nesting material built up around the original stove pipe)


