In our earlier posts we determined the horizontal and vertical components of wind load on a `shop’ (here). The horizontal force was/is 500 lb, as acting on an 8-ft wide `swath’ of shop, which is framed with wood trusses at …

Minimum Design Wind Load – ASCE 7-22 Section 28.3.6 (Envelope Procedure) Read more »

Now let’s look at the wind loading on the shop eaves. We ignored them previously, as we were getting `big picture’ wind loads on the building as a whole … or at least an 8-ft `swath’ of building, as a …

Wind Load on Shop Eaves – ASCE 7-22 – Envelope Procedure – MWFRS Read more »

(c) Jeff R. Filler, Pell City, April 2023 In previous examples (here and here) we looked at the horizontal and vertical wind forces on a `shop’. The shop is/was a `pretend’ structure in a real location, Latah County, Idaho. It …

Wind Forces on a House (Compared to a `Shop’) – ASCE 7-22 – MWFRS – Envelope Procedure Read more »

In an earlier example (here) we looked at the total horizontal force acting on an 8-foot `swath’ of a shop building, the idea being that the shop is supported by trusses on posts at 8 foot (ft) on center (o.c.), …

Wind Load on a Shop – Envelope Procedure – Part 3 – Vertical (Uplift) Forces Read more »

Let’s look at a post, say in a shop, or a barn, acting as a vertical cantilever. This means that the base of the post is held rigid (not allowed to rotate), while a lateral (horizontal, or sideways) load is …

Cantilever Post Deflection (Post and Bracket) Read more »

Continuing from Part 1 … Step 6: Determine the external pressure coefficients, GCpf … Section 28.3.2.   For Case 1 we get … roof slope tan-1 4/12 = 18.4° … interpolating between 5° and 20° … interp GCpf per slope, …

Wind Load on a Shop Using ASCE 7-22 (Envelope Procedure) – Part 2 (Horizontal Force) Read more »

Part 1 – Velocity Pressure Let’s consider a shop to be constructed in, say, Latah County, Idaho, near the recently publicized college town of Moscow. The shop will not be a `business’, per se; in other words, people will not …

Wind Load on a Shop Using ASCE 7-22 (Envelope Procedure) (Part 1 – Velocity Pressure) Read more »

V (pronounced `Veeee’, in wood engineering, in any particular usage, generally stands for one of two things. As pertaining to loads and forces in (inside of) wood structural members themselves, V stands for `Shear’, in particular `horizontal shear’, and specifically …

Veeeee Read more »

Okay, let’s say I’m gonna build a `shop’ near, say, Moscow (Latah County), Idaho, Zip 83843. The big worries there are snow, in winter, and wind, any time of year. For wind, let’s go to https://hazards.atcouncil.org, … `Wind’, and then …

The 50-Year Wind Read more »

Pole barn versus post frame … how to keep the structure from flopping over? Consider a barn, or perhaps a shop, made using timber and `posts’. There are two main ways to keep it from flopping over. One way is …

`a constantly debated topic’ (pole barn versus post frame) Read more »