Timber Framers Guild

Cabana raising

Posted By: Thane O'Dell

Cabana raising - 06/25/09 12:01 AM

We raised the Cabana today. Holy crap was it ever hot!
Everything fit very well even the peg holes all had the proper draw. I am very pleased as this is my largest project to date.
I have some pictures but don't have a photo bucket or even know much about it. Is there another way to post pictures?

Thane
Posted By: bmike

Re: Cabana raising - 06/25/09 12:35 AM

sign up for a picassa account on google, or flickr.... its free storage - and some of the sites will allow you to order prints (assuming you have digital camera.

PM me if you need help getting the images to show up in a post.
Posted By: Thane O'Dell

Re: Cabana raising - 06/26/09 02:12 PM

[img] [img]

The High hoe had just enough reach for the inside beam.
That would be me in the white tee-shirt and jeans.
Thane
Posted By: Thane O'Dell

Re: Cabana raising - 06/26/09 02:14 PM

Ok, What happen to the words? They got squished!
Oops.
Posted By: Dave Shepard

Re: Cabana raising - 06/26/09 06:54 PM

Looks great! What will the roof be?
Posted By: Thane O'Dell

Re: Cabana raising - 06/26/09 07:13 PM

Tongue and groove pine (stained dark) then strapped, then sheeting and ashphalt shingles. Gable ends to remain open. One end and half the back will be covered where the kitchen and bar will be. I am to be invited to the first barbeque. I will then get photos of it complete.
Thane
Posted By: Ray Gibbs

Re: Cabana raising - 06/26/09 10:57 PM

Fine looking frame Thane.
Posted By: Ken Hume

Re: Cabana raising - 06/27/09 07:24 AM

Hi Thane,

Have you considered that you might have oversized the wall plates just a bit ?

Ken Hume
Posted By: Thane O'Dell

Re: Cabana raising - 06/27/09 10:54 AM

Maybe, but I did do the math on it. I have a calculator that I downloaded from the web that is used for simple beam calculations. I used a combined load of 50 psf and the wood specs from the lowest grade of E.W.pine.(The roof is 16x25 with 8:12 pitch)
The plates are 8x14x24' sitting on posts 1 ft from the ends.
It would have been easier to plane if they were only 12" instead of 14". Anyway it's done and the client loves it.
Thane
Posted By: TIMBEAL

Re: Cabana raising - 06/27/09 03:00 PM

Or, at 25' are you sure it is big enough? The client has the final word.

Tim
Posted By: Ken Hume

Re: Cabana raising - 06/27/09 03:41 PM

Hi Timbeal,

Ooops! - I hadn't spotted that this frame has a single 25' clear span bay between the bents (cross frames). That's really a tad too much and it might have been better to split this span into 2 bays of 12.5ft. For future reference 16ft is approaching the maximum length per bay and more usually bay lengths are in the range 8 - 12 ft. This frame is very "empty" and as such it has very little in the way of second lines of defence for load shedding should there ever be a major component failure.

Given that the frame has a fairly low pitch roof and a fairly light roof covering and that the gable ends are to remain open (the sides as well ?) then I would anticipate that this frame will most likely be vulnerable to wind damage. Frame design is not all about beam sizing to satisfy dead loads.

Regards

Ken Hume
Posted By: Thane O'Dell

Re: Cabana raising - 06/27/09 04:30 PM

Actually it is only 22 ft between posts. The end to the left (north) will be filled in as well as half of one side. In the end however the client did want a clear span of 24ft. I tried to persuade them to add a post to no avail so I made it 22 ft in order put full size tennons on the post tops that could have two pegs. The client also wanted the end beams to be the same hieght as the side beams. That would have been a whole different ball game and I didn't have the confidence to do that properly.
My original design for this frame had the posts four feet in from the ends reducing the span to 16ft. It also had braces on both sides of the posts and it looked better. That design was rejected by the client. I did what I could to make it as strong as possible.
Thane
Posted By: Ken Hume

Re: Cabana raising - 06/27/09 05:47 PM

Hi Thane,

Who is liable if this frame fails and kills someone i.e. who is responsible for the design ?

At what point do you walk away from a prospective job when the client is not listening ?

You will have to learn to pick your jobs and your customers.

Regards

Ken Hume
Posted By: Thane O'Dell

Re: Cabana raising - 06/27/09 06:06 PM

There is a lot of value in what your saying Ken and in the future if I don't feel right about something a client wants I may say no. In the mean time I really do hope no one gets hurt as a result of my apparently inadequate frame design.
Thane
Posted By: Ray Gibbs

Re: Cabana raising - 06/27/09 07:06 PM

Again, fine looking frame Thane.
Posted By: bmike

Re: Cabana raising - 06/27/09 10:01 PM

As I mentioned in another thread, before we jump to conclusions and get all didactic on Thane, maybe we should have some information pertaining to the structure?

What species did you end up with? I know you used EWP#2 for the calcs.

What will be sheathing the roof?

What is the roof material (metal, shingle, slate?)

Are there concerns for absurd wind loads? (on the coast? hurricane zone? tornado alley?)

What did you do for a hold down to the piers or slab? Are there footers under the slab?

What size are the posts?

I see through tenons at the bents - how thick? how long? wedged?

How long are the tenons into the plates and ridge? How long?

Pegs and species?

What will the materials / build up be for infill sections - will they be sheathed in plywood and sided? stud infilled?

Will there be anything else in the structure that will act as bracing - a bar, storage, seating, etc. etc?

Just some questions that would really paint a clearer picture before we should be talking about it falling over and someone starting a law suit.
Posted By: bmike

Re: Cabana raising - 06/27/09 10:11 PM

Originally Posted By: Ken Hume
Hi Timbeal,

Ooops! - I hadn't spotted that this frame has a single 25' clear span bay between the bents (cross frames). That's really a tad too much and it might have been better to split this span into 2 bays of 12.5ft. For future reference 16ft is approaching the maximum length per bay and more usually bay lengths are in the range 8 - 12 ft. This frame is very "empty" and as such it has very little in the way of second lines of defence for load shedding should there ever be a major component failure.

Given that the frame has a fairly low pitch roof and a fairly light roof covering and that the gable ends are to remain open (the sides as well ?) then I would anticipate that this frame will most likely be vulnerable to wind damage. Frame design is not all about beam sizing to satisfy dead loads.

Regards

Ken Hume



Ken, I disagree. The rule of thumb should be tied exclusively to function, desired form, and how the two inter-relate about the engineering to make it work. A blanket thought on 'emptiness' is quite subjective, and it would be a sad thing to see most things designed with 8-12' bays with little to no reference to function.



As I understand it this wants to be an open air pavilion. The plates are probably OK, depending on snow load and roofing material. My guess is that there is more a worry of uplift here that failure from roof load - so critical information will be how the rafters are held down, and if the bracing along the ridge and plates will be enough to keep things rigid (this also is highly dependent on roof sheathing choice).

Hold downs to the foundation are another potential area that play into this, if the 'kite' effect with the partially closed structure is strong enough to tip it over.

I think to put design on autopilot and drop posts every 8-12 feet and give someone a rule such that (and I quote) "For future reference 16ft is approaching the maximum length per bay and more usually bay lengths are in the range 8 - 12 ft." is doing a disservice to the trade and to what wood can do... especially in a design that wants to be an open roof to enjoy drinks lake or poolside.
Posted By: Ken Hume

Re: Cabana raising - 06/28/09 08:43 AM

Hi Mike,

You and others are perfectly at liberty to disagree with my thoughts and opinions but that does not necesarily make you right and me wrong (in my opinion). History and traditional craft practice is on my side in respect to what I have preached whereas you seem to be promoting the idea to a new entrant that he should take a walk on the wild side. That's a fine thing to do as long as you are equipped, aware, educated, experienced and have very deep pockets but I very much doubt this to be the case in question.

Thane, by his own confession, has already agreed with me that a centre bent was considered and rejected by the owner and it was this that resulted in the adoption of the extreme scantlings seen at the ridge and wall plates plus also the lack of long wall and cross frame infill timbers.

I note that you have actually started to follow the same analytical path that I trod but have not chosen to be so economical with your words. You have now asked so many questions of Thane (as yet unanswered) that this might well now be a cause of concern to him. I tried to resist that temptation in order to let him discover and hopefully gain confidence in how to contribute towards the decision making process hopefully helping him to achieve better (future) outcomes.

We need to keep in mind that most subscribers to the TFG Forums are in discovery mode and therefore its not entirely unreasonable to provide them with a few rules of thumb that will help guide them until they gain that all important experience.

My current project involves the use of 68 foot long (that's the width of Westminster Hall hammer beam roof) single piece beams, simply supported at the centre only and subject to both bending in two planes and torsion. This would not be a good timber frame introductory project nor one where rules of thumb would be appropriate but it is one where previous craft based design solutions have been verified through a process of trial and error. This is a perfectly valid approach providing people don't get hurt whilst the experiment proceeds. We are today more aware of our responsibilities towards others to say nothing of today's culture of litigation so its not entirely unreasonable that the general craft should evolve to become risk averse and it seems to me just plain common sense to adopt well tried and proven solutions and practices.

Timber Framing is not a trade it is a craft and your remarks about me doing a disservice to same are frankly insulting.

Regards

Ken Hume P.Eng.
Posted By: Thane O'Dell

Re: Cabana raising - 06/28/09 10:52 AM

Thanks Ray, I agree
Posted By: Thane O'Dell

Re: Cabana raising - 06/28/09 12:06 PM

Wood species is pine with cherry braces and pegs.
Roof sheathing is 2x6 T&G pine plus 1/2 O.S.B. Plus ashphalt.
Rafters (6x6 with bird's mouth) screwed with 1/2" x 6" screws.
Posts are 8x8 with 2x7.5x6" tennons.(2 pegs)
Tie beams are 8x10 with 2x9.5x10" tennons. (3 pegs)
Post in steel saddles with 2 1/2"x 4" screws each.
Saddles anchored to 16 "x 4' piers with 4 1/2x3 lags.
Snow load here is 30 psf.
I allowed 5000 LB/beam total load in my calculations.
North end filled. Board & batton
Partial fill on east side. Same
Just a note. This thing is open for the most part. If there is a wind strong enough to blow this thing over, there will not likely be anyone inside.
It's true. I'm fairly new to this. I raised my first frame in '03. (An 8x20 wood shed with 4"x4" timbers) It stands open to north west winds. Loads were not calculated. Looking back now, the 1x3.5 tennons were too short. It probably breaks all the rules in the book. It's still there.
Thane
Posted By: bmike

Re: Cabana raising - 06/28/09 12:37 PM

Ken,

Nowhere did I say you were wrong, only that I disagreed. You gave a didactic and kurt response / answer without really asking any question of the poster. I'm not really looking for answers nor to do an analysis of his project - but in another thread on barn repair I stated as I will state again here - folks commenting on engineering / safety / etc. should have a clear idea of the project in terms of loads / species / sizes / design intent / etc. before jumping to conclusions. Your post went from zero to lawsuit in no time - is that encouraging to these folks you claim to be in 'discovery'? While you may have tried to be short with your words - what I read was that 'This thing is going to fall over, you are an idiot for not pressuring your clients, and you should have fired them!'.

I'm one that would argue heartily that timber framers need to be smart about design / engineering / codes / etc. What I'm not so sure on is 'tried and true' practices. Back it up with some data and I'm with you... and I agree that a novice shouldn't take on complex trusswork or structures - no doubt - but I do believe it is a disservice to write off anything outside the sliced Wonder bread mentality of so so many frames that I see stateside - same bents over and over with no regard to function, packed into tight little bays...

And 68' roof systems are VERY different from a 25' outdoor pavilion. I agree.
Posted By: Thane O'Dell

Re: Cabana raising - 06/28/09 12:53 PM

Thanks again ken for your valued opinion.
I certainly would not be designing any Hammer beams. As of yet, I have been unable to fully wrap my head around them. I wonder if you could make me a diagram of a typical Hammer Beam which clearly points out forces and their direction.
Also Ken, I disagree with Mike when he said you were a disservice to the trade. It is culmination of everyones response within the thread that will give me a sense of direction. Though I may like someones responce more than another, I have read them all and they will affect future decisions.
Thane

Posted By: Ken Hume

Re: Cabana raising - 06/28/09 01:09 PM

Hi Thane,

Well said ! and thanks for those kind words.

I shall look out some papers that I have on hammer beams and email these to you. Even the heavist of heavy weight engineers argue over how hammer beam roofs work though I think that the work done by Robert Mark and his students at Princetown University goes a long way to providing the answer - this is featured in Timber Framing No 30 (9 December 1993) and also check out Ed Levin's follow up article in Timber Framing No 48 (June 1998) which includes load diagrams.

Regards

Ken Hume
Posted By: bmike

Re: Cabana raising - 06/29/09 11:29 AM

Originally Posted By: Thane O'Dell

Also Ken, I disagree with Mike when he said you were a disservice to the trade.



Umm, hey, I never said Ken was a disservice to the trade. I did say that I felt laying down a prescription for specific lengths of bays without real connection to the function / use / form of the space was a disservice to the trade and to what wood can do.

Please re-read my post.


Posted By: Ken Hume

Re: Cabana raising - 06/29/09 12:02 PM

Hi Mike,

I am prepared to accept that a genuine misunderstanding over your words has taken place and hence I hope that you will accept my apologies in good spirit for any consequent over reaction to same by me.

Regards

Ken Hume

Posted By: Thane O'Dell

Re: Cabana raising - 06/29/09 06:28 PM

Oops! (Face red with shame) Now that you have reworded it, it has become even more clear, and I will have to agree with you.
We should not be confined to thinking inside a 500 year old box. A lot(most) of the Timber Framing applications have changed since Colonial American times. Not only that, it can be fun thinking outside the box.

Thane
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