January 2, 2012

CT carriage shed truss

This is a neat little truss in a small ca. 1875 Connecticut carriage shed (approx. 18' x 22' - I'll have a chance to get a better look & measurements later in the year).  A simple & well thought out frame, one where it seems that the builders were quite comfortable mixing traditional timber joinery with small sawn/nailed members: many of the rafters are 2x6s run on on the flat!
Looking north from a later addition - the original structure has two bays/three bents, with the clear-span tie/girt of the center bent supported by the iron rod visible here.  The top of the rod sits at the apex of two 4x4 members that run parallel to the rafters approx. 6" below the roof boards.
Another view in the same direction.  The three bents are framed identically, with the center tie supported by an iron rod and the exterior two held in place by their vertical boarding and a door stud.  The white-painted piece of scrap at the top of the iron rod (and its double on the other side) hold the top of the truss vertical.


The west side of the center bent.  Both eaves walls are framed identically: one bay a full-size door w/header (the farther bay here and below), the other with two braces up to the plate and two horizontal nailers.  The square wooden "washers" to the left mark the ends of the bolts holding the rail for the sliding door.

The east side of the center bent.  Note here & above that the angled supports for the tie rod appear to rest on a nailed-on piece of 1" scrap.  The eaves post in this bent is an older hewn hardwood timber, one of only a few reused pieces in the building.

1 comment:

  1. Nice work. I haven't looked at this whole thing yet, but I will.

    -Danimal Mitchell

    ReplyDelete

Creative Commons License
This work by Pownalborough Restorations LLC is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported License.