![]() ![]() After my last correspondence, I did not even get a response from your company. I wanted a heavy duty pole building and this is in my opinion barely adequate. I can’t even explain the level of anger and dis-satisfaction with this building. I just started putting up the building this September. I was actually going to sell the kit at a great loss and start over with a different design due to anger about the design. I really wanted 6×6 posts and am stuck with the 4×6 posts included in the kit. I actually delayed my project by a year because of my lack of satisfaction with the size of the posts that were in the kit I purchased. That is news to me! I am wondering how this was decided. I noticed my client login states that it is closed because my project is completed. My question is will the roof support the added load and will I be creating a major problem with mill due and condensation, since there will be no airspace between the metal and sheetrock? Your help would greatly be appreciated. I want to cover the rafters and trusses with ½” thick sheetrock, then paint to hide the added insulation and wiring. There are two double trusses 7” apart and spaced at 12 foot centers in the middle. The 2” x 6” rafters are spaced 24” on center the length of the barn. I have added R21 paper backed fiberglass insulation in between the rafters. It is to hot in the summer and to cold in the winter to enjoy, (conveting it into a Mancave). It came with a 24′ x 36′ pole barn with a corrugated steel roof and a ½” thick plastic insulation blanket on the underside of the metal at ceiling. We live in South Eastern Washington State and are the second owners of a home we bought a few years ago. Very helpful web page you have provided to all of us needing to know DIY ers. They stand as a tribute to the ingenuity of modern pole building design. Hundreds of thousands of pole barns are in use today with trusses spaced every 12 feet, or even more. The practicality, cost effectiveness and ease of construction of pole buildings is based upon efficient use of the fewest amount of materials, to do the most work, within safe engineering design. Their programs will allow for trusses to be placed on 12 foot or even 16 foot centers, and their engineers will place their engineer’s seal on the drawings to verify. The manufacturers of the steel roof truss plates (also referred to as gussets or Gang-nails), provide the engineering design for pre-fabricated wood trusses. Their defense is, “Our engineers will not allow us to”. I’ve had roof truss manufacturers try to convince me it is impossible to place wood trusses at spacings of over every 4 feet. With this design change, roof trusses could be placed 12 feet apart, making it possible for roofs to support the loads to which they would be subjected. It was Perkins who pioneered roof purlins being placed on edge. Howard Doane is credited with being the innovator of the modern pole barn, it was his Agricultural Service farm manager, Bernon Perkins, who is credited with refining the evolution of the modern pole building to a long-lasting structure. They are inanimate! Yet, somewhere in the deep, dark reaches of history, lies the theory wood trusses must be spaced no more than 24” on center, or maybe 48”, or perhaps even eight or ten feet? The reality is, there is no magic number. The lumber and steel plates the trusses are constructed from, have no idea how far apart they are going to be placed. Enter the span of the truss, bay spacing and load conditions and the engineering programs will design a truss which will meet the design criteria. Modern truss design is highly computerized. ![]() Hansen Buildings has buildings in each of the 50 states and all of them have roof trusses on what my board member friend would describe as being “widely spaced”. One of my fellow board members from the Midwest wanted to take a peek at how pole barns were constructed in the West, so I invited him out for a tour.Īfter spending a day looking at several of our building projects, his comment to me was, “The inspectors in our area would never let a pole building be constructed with roof trusses placed every 12 feet”. What do you mean they are not 2 feet apart?īack in the day (early 1990’s) I was on the National Frame Builders Association (NFBA) Board of Directors. ![]()
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