Nate.s
New member
Hi All,
I have a two story, two car garage built in late 40's that has a sagging roof. It appears the top plates are causing the sag. There is no ridge beam but the rafters are still connected at the peak.
I realize the best approach would be a new roof but I'm trying to hold off on that for a few years. The walls appear to be fine except at the top where they are bowing.
I have placed temporary supports that align with steel building columns beneath.
I'm planning on jacking the roof and then adding collar ties and trusses.
I've had a few contractors take a look and none have seen this happen before. Has anyone here experienced this?
Is there a way to pull the top plates back in? (I've seen on people mention on here to use a come along, turnbuckle, chain but that work in this case?)
Should I jack the roof, add new top plate, then sister the rafters?
Thanks for any feedback!
Edit to added a picture of the ridge.
I have a two story, two car garage built in late 40's that has a sagging roof. It appears the top plates are causing the sag. There is no ridge beam but the rafters are still connected at the peak.
I realize the best approach would be a new roof but I'm trying to hold off on that for a few years. The walls appear to be fine except at the top where they are bowing.
I have placed temporary supports that align with steel building columns beneath.
I'm planning on jacking the roof and then adding collar ties and trusses.
I've had a few contractors take a look and none have seen this happen before. Has anyone here experienced this?
Is there a way to pull the top plates back in? (I've seen on people mention on here to use a come along, turnbuckle, chain but that work in this case?)
Should I jack the roof, add new top plate, then sister the rafters?
Thanks for any feedback!
Edit to added a picture of the ridge.
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All kidding aside, above sounds like a very safe plan of attack.