lakeroadster
Well-known member
I ran a FEA on this today.
Hats off to LX-Markham. Slick design that is very strong..
Hats off to LX-Markham. Slick design that is very strong..
A little late to the discussion here, but I thought I would add what I did with my garage and the same problem.
Added structural steel (2 horizontal beams and 2 end ties) around the base of the existing trusses, then sistered new rafters to the existing truss top chords. The steel frame prevents the rafter from spreading out. Then the truss bottom chords and diagonals were cut out. The whole thing was done in place without removing the roof.
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C250x23 (C10x15.3) fastened to the wall top plate.
2"x8" rafters bearing on the wall top plate and notched into c-channel.
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The roof sheathing is still attached to the truss top chord. The new rafters pick up and support the truss panel points.
The channel is designed much like a wind girt: unsupported in the strong direction, and suspended from the rafters at every 4th one to prevent it from sagging.

