Falcon67
Well-known member
Had forgotten about this thread - well done. Give me a good idea how to fix up my lift area. Easier here because my framing members are already way bigger than what was used in your original trusses.
Looks pretty well thought out to me.Maybe I'm the only one... but all this was quite confusing since there was no link to the modifications that astroracer did to his trusses?
I did some searching and found that astroracer's truss modifications are discussed on post #13 here: http://www.garagejournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=330774&highlight=truss
Here's his quote:
Looks like a lot of structure has been added and the installation looks great.All that additional sheathing really helps to strengthen the framing.
Neither I nor anybody else here can say if this will or won't work without knowing more.

Thank You!
The modifications WERE well engineered and well executed. I am VERY confident they will continue to do the job they were designed to do.
I posted them up as an example of what can be done. I did not expect the unabashed deriding I received. NO ONE has asked how the mods were engineered or even asked for more info. They just start swinging away with their holier then thou bats.
The lack of respect on this site is really getting old...
Mark







Thank You; so I understand fully - you wouldn't mod the trusses or add scissor trusses sistered in at all?"buy 3 new scissors trusses that match the pitch and heel height of the existing trusses, then install them next to the existing trusses, then cut away the bottom chord of the existing truss."
I think this is the best advise posted so far. But I personally, would never modify a truss framed roof.
LOL, Field Tested.I modified the trusses in my shop to make height for a lift, I did it one at a time and added knee braces that tied the walls to the truss and moved the rafter ties up to my desired height and laminated every joint with 1/2 inch ply and liquid nails and 8 or so nails from each side. I started at the front and moved my way to the back and used a floor jack and a 4x4 to hold the ridge beam in place while modifying each one and the ridge beam stayed exactly the same measurement as before. I also had a portly neighbor go up the roof and stand on the ridge and measured for deflection and saw none.
I mean I wanted to know if it was gonna deflect and I figured I should know that before it snowed so I could make corrections before hand. To call him portly isn't fair, he's a solid 350-400lbs.LOL, Field Tested.
I personally wouldn't modify a truss framed roof. But I may be more conservative than others.Thank You; so I understand fully - you wouldn't mod the trusses or add scissor trusses sistered in at all?
In other words, live with the roof as is?
Its an older lift. Brand is Gemini Lifts out of Texas. No longer in business. Parts are still somewhat available and interchangeable with some older rotary lifts. Was a FB marketplace find less than a mile from my house. The guy never got it fully up and functional. Had brand new lift cylinders, slider blocks, cables, and frame pads for it. I would have preferred a clear floor with 3 stage arms, but for $700 and all new parts I couldn't beat it. Its perfect for what I do. I have even lifted my CC, long bed F350, but can't lift it all the way because the truck is too long for my shop..OMG YOUR GONNA DIE!
but on a more serious note, what lift is that?
You are correct. They were labeled that way in the graphic and I didn't look at it closely enough before posting. There are tray or coffer trusses available that require only two points of support.The bottom two trusses drawn above require 4 supports, and the middle truss is not a scissor truss.
My point in my post above is that it is almost impossible to build a truss without the truss plates. The connection forces at the heel and at chord splices are just too high. Buy properly designed and fabricated trusses.

