Usually called "wall plate". It is usually a wooden beam or joist running along
the walls on which the roofing joists fix.
Regards
John Duggan,
Wales, UK
________________________________
From: ChrisB <ftog@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: Olympus Camera Discussion <olympus@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Tuesday, December 23, 2014 11:03 AM
Subject: Re: [OM] Waiting for the mail
Blimmin’ expensive, Chuck! Enough to make us wonder if we should be
refurbishing or rebuilding:-)
It was the structural engineer who mentioned 'plate’. I took it to mean the
interface between roof support and the top of the external walls. The result
was that the roof beams had splayed by a couple of centimetres. The problem
was lack of support because the builder who converted the ancient farm building
(part of the farm that used to be next to our land) extended the barn by about
4m, removing the original end wall without replacing the wall’s anchoring
function with something else. When we bought the property the surveyor
recommended that we instal a couple of tie bars to stop further movement of the
side walls; but when our current builder had removed the plasterboard he found
that more movement had taken place and we needed to brace the walls more
effectively. So they used 4x2 wood to make a frame on the inside of the walls,
tied to the walls with screws fixed in epoxy into the bricks, installed a
box-beam (plywood encasing a frame
of 4x2) ridge-piece in the roof and a large steel girder running up the side
walls in the middle to meet at the ridge. The result is a building whose
bricks could be dissolved but which would remain standing. The had to replace
the roof tiles as well since they previous tiles, heavy concrete (ugly) things
were apparently too heavy for the structure.
It looks great, though. We’re going to spend a couple of nights in there over
Christmas before we allow the clans to invade after Christmas.
Chris
> On 23 Dec 2014, at 00:31, Chuck Norcutt <chucknorcutt@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> Sounds expensive from your description. But you used a term I'm unfamiliar
> with... "roof plate". I couldn't readily find a definition that wasn't
> biological. I even checked various forms of post and beam construction but
> no mention of roof plates.
--
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