FordTruckWench
Well-known member
Getting back to a much delayed project...
An 8' x 16' *cough* 15' shed. The ground is sloping, and I want the shed floor raised up a bit - possibly as much as 4' at one corner. Thus there is plenty of air space under the floor, plenty of vertical clearance for all framing. Consider the wood floor to be temporary, to be replaced in the far future with a masonry foundation and slab floor.
The long time plan has been to have two 16' 4x6 beams supported on posts and pier blocks. Then nine 8' 4x6 joists topped by 16' 2x6 T&G decking. Based on current prices for T&G, I'll instead use plywood with the grain in the 16' direction. Lets call this the "ladder" configuration.
Should I flip the joist direction? In this configuration, there would be three "bents" topped with 8' 4x6 beams. Then five 16' 4x6 joists topped by plywood with the grain in the 8' direction. Call this the "(railroad) trestle" configuration.
Both configurations use the same total length of 4x6 material. Both have 8' joist spans. Both have 4' beam spans between piers. The trestle configuration needs one fewer pier block (9 vs. 10).
An 8' x 16' *cough* 15' shed. The ground is sloping, and I want the shed floor raised up a bit - possibly as much as 4' at one corner. Thus there is plenty of air space under the floor, plenty of vertical clearance for all framing. Consider the wood floor to be temporary, to be replaced in the far future with a masonry foundation and slab floor.
The long time plan has been to have two 16' 4x6 beams supported on posts and pier blocks. Then nine 8' 4x6 joists topped by 16' 2x6 T&G decking. Based on current prices for T&G, I'll instead use plywood with the grain in the 16' direction. Lets call this the "ladder" configuration.
Should I flip the joist direction? In this configuration, there would be three "bents" topped with 8' 4x6 beams. Then five 16' 4x6 joists topped by plywood with the grain in the 8' direction. Call this the "(railroad) trestle" configuration.
Both configurations use the same total length of 4x6 material. Both have 8' joist spans. Both have 4' beam spans between piers. The trestle configuration needs one fewer pier block (9 vs. 10).
