TECHNICAL PAPERS
May 1, 1985

Repair Technique for Buckled Wood Truss Members

Publication: Journal of Structural Engineering
Volume 111, Issue 5

Abstract

Many examples of wood roof trusses built in the early 1900's still exist today. The compression members were often composed of built‐up, vertically laminated lumber sections inadequately tied together and often laterally unbraced for substantial distances. Delaminations due to seasonal swelling and shrinkage forced the pieces to behave individually. The resulting overstresses initiated lateral buckling which became amplified by creep in the wood over an extended period of time. The roof surface warps and tears; moisture enters, and evidence of a problem finally becomes visible. Serviceability, and more importantly, safety, is threatened. A relatively unknown repair technique to permanently straighten and strengthen bowed and fractured truss compression members utilizes structural steel shapes to clamp and squeeze out the bow. A series of 1911 wood scissors trusses which/were fractured and near collapse, were recently saved by this technique. The primary advantages of this repair method are simplicity, economy, avoidance of roof removal, and minimal intrusion on the original esthetics.

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References

1.
Avent, R. R., Emkin, L. Z., Howard, R. H., and Chapman, C. L., “Epoxy Repaired Bolted Timber Connections,” Journal of the Structural Division, ASCE, Vol. 102, No. ST4, Proc. Paper 12061, Apr., 1976, pp. 821–838.
2.
Avent, R. R., Emkin, L. Z., and Sanders, H., “Behavior of Epoxy Repaired Full Scale Timber Trusses,” Journal of the Structural Division, ASCE, Vol. 104, No. ST6, Proc. Paper 13817, June, 1978, pp. 933–951.
3.
Gurfinkel, G., “Chapter 8—Behavior and Design of Wood Columns,” Wood Engineering, Southern Forest Products Assoc., New Orleans, La., 1973, pp. 277–278.
4.
Hoyle, R. J., “Chapter 3—Mechanical Properties of Wood,” Wood Technology in the Design of Structures, 4th Ed., Mountain Press Publishing Co., Missoula, Mont., 1972, pp. 19–36.
5.
Subcommittee on Evaluation, Maintenance and Upgrading of Timber Structures of the Committee on Wood, Alan Freas, Chairman, Evaluation, Maintenance and Upgrading of Wood Structures—A Guide and Commentary, American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), New York, N.Y., 1982, pp. 194–253.
6.
U.S. Forest Products Lab., “Chapter 8—Wood Structural Members,” Wood Handbook: Wood as an Engineering Material, U.S. Dept. of Agriculture Handbook No. 72, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C., 1974, pp. 11–12.

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Go to Journal of Structural Engineering
Journal of Structural Engineering
Volume 111Issue 5May 1985
Pages: 949 - 960

History

Published online: May 1, 1985
Published in print: May 1985

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Authors

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David J. Wickersheimer
Assoc. Prof., School of Architecture, Univ. of Illinois, 309 Architecture Building, Urbana, Ill. 61801; Pres., Wickersheimer Engineers Inc., 821 S. Neil St., Champaign, Ill. 61820

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