Been registered here for a while, but just now posting. Great site with lots of good info! Actually, browsing this site has given me a lot of ideas to use in my new garage/apartment. 
I'm building a 50x20 (inside demension) garage with a split level living area. Total downstairs (including the bathroom) will be about 1,100sq ft and the upstairs will be right at 750sq ft.
13' ceiling height on one half, and 7'8" on the second half.
12/12 Sissor Trusses on one half, and 12/12 Livable Attic Trusses on the other.
Garage door will be a 16x10.
Started this project at the first of November and it's been slow going due to the weather. I'm open up for suggestions on ideas of different things so if you see something that could be improved post up!
I'm planning on it flooding sometime down the road (next to a creek obviously), hence why I used block on the lower 3 ft of the garage, and, using 10' studs gives me the height I need for my 2-post lift.
The old garage and out-building will be gone that you see in the pictures this summer, as well as all the trees once this new garage gets complete. I'll then start a foundation of my house overtop the existing pad of the old 22x36' garage once I get my garage paid off. Nothing real fancy, but it's all I'll ever need.Trusses will hopefully be up this week, and I'll post pictures as progress allows.
Now, on to the pictures and the problem......
Okay, the problem is this.......
How to span this 20' (21' plywood to plywood) with NO SUPPORTS underneath? I was settled on the idea up until now to go with 16" floor trusses. However, those are going to run me $1,500 and I'm pretty sure those are overkill. However, it's better to be safe than sorry and with me being an engineer that's how I think.
However, after searching this site, I found span charts and I'm now leaning towards 2x12x22's (cutting to fit) to span the distance on 16" centers. According to the charts (if i'm reading them correctly) I can span a 19'11" span with a 60psf live load + 20 psf dead load. Would this be strong enough to support, say, a pool table with several friends? I'm not a structural engineer so I don't really want to dig into my books to figure all that out to be honest, lol.
The way I plan to attach the 2x12's is to sandwhich a 2x6 against the wall joist and set the 2x12 on top of it, then under the 2x12 (going horizontal on the wall) installing a 2x4 as a cleat. This would effectivelly make my free-standing span 19'9" which falls within the safe limits of the load chart. Would this be strong enough or, is my thinking all backwards? lol
Any help is appreciated, this is my first time designing and building anything.

I'm building a 50x20 (inside demension) garage with a split level living area. Total downstairs (including the bathroom) will be about 1,100sq ft and the upstairs will be right at 750sq ft.
13' ceiling height on one half, and 7'8" on the second half.
12/12 Sissor Trusses on one half, and 12/12 Livable Attic Trusses on the other.
Garage door will be a 16x10.
Started this project at the first of November and it's been slow going due to the weather. I'm open up for suggestions on ideas of different things so if you see something that could be improved post up!
I'm planning on it flooding sometime down the road (next to a creek obviously), hence why I used block on the lower 3 ft of the garage, and, using 10' studs gives me the height I need for my 2-post lift.
The old garage and out-building will be gone that you see in the pictures this summer, as well as all the trees once this new garage gets complete. I'll then start a foundation of my house overtop the existing pad of the old 22x36' garage once I get my garage paid off. Nothing real fancy, but it's all I'll ever need.Trusses will hopefully be up this week, and I'll post pictures as progress allows.
Now, on to the pictures and the problem......
Okay, the problem is this.......
How to span this 20' (21' plywood to plywood) with NO SUPPORTS underneath? I was settled on the idea up until now to go with 16" floor trusses. However, those are going to run me $1,500 and I'm pretty sure those are overkill. However, it's better to be safe than sorry and with me being an engineer that's how I think.

However, after searching this site, I found span charts and I'm now leaning towards 2x12x22's (cutting to fit) to span the distance on 16" centers. According to the charts (if i'm reading them correctly) I can span a 19'11" span with a 60psf live load + 20 psf dead load. Would this be strong enough to support, say, a pool table with several friends? I'm not a structural engineer so I don't really want to dig into my books to figure all that out to be honest, lol.
The way I plan to attach the 2x12's is to sandwhich a 2x6 against the wall joist and set the 2x12 on top of it, then under the 2x12 (going horizontal on the wall) installing a 2x4 as a cleat. This would effectivelly make my free-standing span 19'9" which falls within the safe limits of the load chart. Would this be strong enough or, is my thinking all backwards? lol
Any help is appreciated, this is my first time designing and building anything.
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