Floor Truss Goof

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ChrisM

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I thought I was approaching this project wisely by paying a strutural engineer 350.00 to consult on the project. After he came to the house and saw the project in person he advised I could box in the trusses by gluing and screwing 5/8" plywood to both sides to stiffen them leaving holes for wires and a hvac duct. I even went ahead and got a building permit describing the project in detail with pictures. Now I understand I've created box girders and have compromised the trusses. The engineer who advised on the project will not return my calls. Below are photos. Any suggestions would be welcome.

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Chris, first off welcome to House Repair Talk. Looks like you put a lot effort in your project so far.Give us a little background, what was your origional issue? Did the engineer give you a written report detailing his proposed action? Who told you that the structure was compromised?
 
The engineer didn't detail anything for me. I presented my idea for stiffening the floor trusses and originally I was only going to put ply on one side but he said to do both sides and said it was alright to proceed as planned. A civil engineer on another website told me I'd compromised the trusses and created box girders. He also said the entire structure could build up a lot of stress due to changes in humidity and temperature. The original problem was the trusses were deflecting too much making the floor feel more like a trampoline. Now the floor feels like concrete.

There are 8 trusses 14" deep spaning 21' spaced 24"OC covering an area of about 294 sq ft. The added weight on the trusses would be about 800lbs.
 
Thanks for your help on this and welcoming me to the site.
 
ChrisM:

I'll do this in point form for brevity:

1. I graduated in mechanical engineering in 1978. I don't remember much of the formulas I learned and memorized in university, but I still understand the theory and the basics. And, in this case, that's all you'll need to understand to realize that you haven't done any harm at all. In fact, I believe you got good advice from the first engineer.

2. As long as you never REMOVED any wood, then you could not have weakened anything. Adding material strengthens the trusses, but where you add it makes a big difference on how effective it is at increasing the strength and rigidity of the trusses. Boxing in those trusses is certainly an effective way of making them stronger, so what you were told makes good sense from an engineering perspective. And, it was important to have GLUED the plywood to the trusses. Nailing or screwing alone would have done little to strengthen the floor. In fact, the screws can be taken out now that the glue has dried, and the floor will remain equally strong.

3. Wood DOES swell and shrink due to seasonal changes in both relative humidity and temperature. Indoors, for example, you can see gaps open up between the boards in hardwood floors during the winter, and close up again during the summer. However, the amount of change in both relative humidity and temperature INDOORS is relatively small compared to that outdoors. It's the much LARGER dimensional changes in wood that occurs outdoors that's the reason why there are separate lines of interior and exterior oil based paints. Oil based paints dry so hard and rigid that they don't have the elasticity to stretch and shrink as far as wood does, so they have to intentionally screw up the film formation process in exterior oil based paints so that they don't dry as hard, and therefore retain enough softness and elasticity to stretch and shrink with wood outdoors. The dimensional change that occurs in wood indoors is quite small in comparison, and in most cases is ignored.
Gaps can develop between the boards in hardwood floors indoors because it's actually the wood cell walls that become thicker and thinner as the wood swells and shrinks. The wood cells are much larger in softwoods, but the cell wall thicknesses are about the same in all wood species. Since hardwoods have much smaller wood cells than softwoods, they swell and shrink more than softwoods because there are more wood cell walls to swell and shrink per linear inch. This is why you can get a 1/16 of an inch gap in a 1 1/2 inch wide hardwood floor board.
(in both cases, wood cells are shaped like long drinking straws with their ends closed off. because of the shape of wood cells, the swelling across the grain of the wood is typically about 80 time as much as the swelling along the grain of the wood. that's simply because there are far fewer cell walls along the grain than across the grain. the importance of this will become clear when we consider plywoods) So, since the wood we're talking about is indoors, you simply have more uniform temperature and humidity, and so you won't have nearly as much swelling and shrinking as you would outdoors.

4. You clad your trusses on both sides with plywood. When making plywood, they dry the plies out so that the moisture content in the plies is typically only about 4 percent. They do this to ensure that the wood is dry enough that the glue will bond the plies together well (cuz glue won't stick well to wet wood). Then, because the grain of the plies alternates, the amount of swelling or shrinking that occurs as the moisture content of the plywood rises again is constrained by the neighboring plies. The only direction that plywood will swell and shrink normally, the way lumber does, will be in it's thickness. It swells and shrinks much less than lumber in width and length simply because doing so requires the stretching or compression of the wood cells in the neighboring plies. Wood is a relatively soft material, and it's quite easy to get it to retain it's shape even though if it were not constrained in any way it would swell or shrink.

For example, in a fir 2X12 floor joist, it's possible to get up to 8 percent shrinkage from fully water saturated (30 % moisture content) to an oven dried condition (0% moisture content). That's a full INCH in a 11 1/2 inch tall piece of lumber. By contrast, when 4 foot by 8 foot plywood underlayment is nailed down to those same floor joists, the recommended gap to be left between sheets to allow for expansion of the plywood (as it's moisture content increases from 4 percent and stabilizes at about 16 percent indoors) is only 1/8 inch. That's about 1/8 of 1 percent swelling in plywood versus up to 8 percent shrinkage in lumber. The amount of shrinkage and swelling that's going to occur in your plywood is very small, and the fact that it's indoors means that the stresses and whatnot this civil engineer told you were going to wreck your trusses and bring your house crashing down simply won't exist.

You don't need to know the rest...

You should understand the purpose of the pairs of 1X3 boards that run perpendicular to your trusses. A 2X12 can make for a very rigid floor joist, or a really springy diving board. Everything has to do with the direction of the applied force relative to the joist. In order to ensure that the joists are most capable of resisting bending due to a vertical applied force, something has to be done to keep the floor joists vertical. The purpose of the 1X3's nailed between the trusses is to keep all the trusses vertical, so they're most able to resist bending from a vertical applied force. Those 1X3's are more than capable of doing that.

As a result, it really isn't necessary to put plywood on both sides of those 1X3 boards. That plywood will also help to keep the trusses vertical, but it's the plywood you're putting on both sides of the trusses that is increasing the rigidity of your floor, not the stuff you fastened to the 1X3's. The stuff you fasten to the 1X3's will only be helpful when there is so much vertical force on the floor that the floor trusses are ready and wanting to twist sideways under the applied force. You won't have that unless you intend to raise a family of pet elephants in your house.

And, finally, you simply cannot con Mother Nature. The way physicists tell if their theories are correct is by seeing whether not things work the way they predict or not. In your case, your floors used to bend a lot. Now, you say they're much stiffer. That is proof positive that the plywood cladding on the trusses is having the desired effect.

I think the first engineer doesn't want to return your calls simply because he hasn't got enough confidence is the stuff he was taught yet. He simply knows the plywood SHOULD have strengthened the trusses, but if you're telling him it didn't, or that it may have had caused some damage to the design of the trussed floor system as a whole, then it's shaking his confidence in the stuff he thought he knew and understood. He's thinking there's other things that he hadn't considered.

I'd carry on cladding those trusses. But, don't bother cladding the 1X3's on either side. That is where you're getting the least benefit from the time and money spent installing the plywood. Do it when you don't have anything else to do with your time and anything better to do with your money than drink and gamble it away.
 
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Thank you very much for taking the time to post your very detailed reply! I have spent many sleepless nights worrying I did the wrong thing and really messed up my house. Not mention how I was going to tell my wife we might have to spend several thousands to fix the problem. I always research everything I'm about to do thoroughly before touching anything. In this case I'd thought all bases were covered until running into the civil engineer.

I have another part to this project I'd like to discuss before proceeding and would like to get your input.

Again thanks for your information!
 
As a registered PE, here's my take on the situation...

Trusses are used for floor support because they are VERY efficient members -- low weight for lots of strength. If you analyze a truss, all loads are essentially changed to tension and compression loads only in the truss members. Therefore, all joints in the truss are made for only this type of loading.

Box beams on the other hand, carry loads by bending -- tension and compression as well as shear loads. You could place a shear load anywhere across a box beam and if you cut an imaginary section at that point you would see a lot of material from the 2x4s and plywood webs resisting the loading.

So technically, by boxing in the trusses, you have changed them so that they no longer work like trusses. But they do have weak points now at the plywood splices where you butted it up. At these locations, there is little shear strength because if you cut through the section at this point, there are only two small 2x4 pieces seperated by air. The reality is that you have increased the stiffness, probably not lessened the overall strength but the job will look like a homeowner modification which may or may not be significant if you ever sell the home and have a professional buyer inspection. It's not that it doesn't work, it just means that a professional wouldn't have done it that way and it may or may not meet code.
 
I did get a building permit for the job detailing everything as I wrote in the initial post. I have to get approval from the building inspector for the framing which will mean it is up to code and my understanding is that they wouldn't issue a permit if they deemed it was not up to code. I am working with a licensed carpenter who is insured. Should support be added at the the joints of the plywood?

The only question remaining is about the added weight. I have added about 775 lbs to the orginal 500lb load (which was 1/2" sheetrock) for a total of 1275lbs that includes 1/2" sheetrock, R25 Fiberglass Insulation, 2x4's, plywood, screws and glue. That is 4.33lbs per sq over 294 sq ft. Will this overload the trusses or is this not a concern?

Thank you for your input.
 
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Remove the least lumber that makes them statically determinate again - one side of each box?
 
I wouldn't do anything more, except may put in a ceiling below the floor if that is your intention. What you did wasn't perfect, but it made the floor a lot stiffer.
 
I think the proof lies in the pudding.

By his own account, ChrisM says that his floor is much more rigid now than before. That means there's less deflection of the trusses now than before, and that HAS TO MEAN that the new assembly is stronger than what he had before.

I don't accept that stresses due to swelling and shrinking in a relatively soft material like plywood is going to cause problems down the road.
 
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Wow. Those are some really nice reply. I had a good read guys! :D
 
First let me thank everyone for their very knowledgeable replies and for taking the time to post them!

My initial plan was to plywood just one side of each truss with 5/8 ply. The engineer however was the one who said to do both. I suppose at that point I should have used 3/8 ply but I thought the engineer knew his business. The structure is truly stronger but how it will handle additional weight and perform in the future is my real concern. I have a home inspector who is a neighboring town's building inspector coming next week to look at the project. I'm going to show him all these replies and work from there. I am inclined to listen to Nestor_Kelebay but can't ignore the assestments of Wuzzat and CraigFl. The primary goal is a safe code compliant structure not only for my family but for anyone who may buy this home in the future.

Any additional sugestions would certainly be appreciated and I'm sure will be a real reference for anyone doing a similiar project in the future.
 
at the cost of becoming indeterminate. Methinks it may carry the seeds of its own destruction.

I admit it has been about 30 years since engineering school. Can you please explain why this is an issue for this homeowner?
 
I admit it has been about 30 years since engineering school. Can you please explain why this is an issue for this homeowner?

Travelover, I wanted to ask this my self, but after looking at the pics I would think that the weakest part of the boxed area is that all load or flex would be at the joints of the ply. If the joints would of been staggered, like we do when installing plywood decking, the load point would be changed to two locations instead of one, or spread out over the joist.

But then I'm just a roofer...
 
I had the same problem in my home with floor trusses. A structural engineering firm designed a very similar fix with plywood gussets on each side of the trusses. I can send photos and the drawing if that would help.
 
I had the same problem in my home with floor trusses. A structural engineering firm designed a very similar fix with plywood gussets on each side of the trusses. I can send photos and the drawing if that would help.

I should also add that the engineer seemed like he had not encountered this problem in the past and seemed less than totally certain about the fix.
 
Well it's been over two years and the floor is still stiff and strong! Post the pics I'd like to see them.
 
On two occations we have had roof trusses deamed under engineered and this is the fix they came up with. If the city were to fail it, you just shop for an engineer who will write the report that the city will accept An engineer would have a lot more nails in it.
 
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