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Harry K[_2_] Harry K[_2_] is offline
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Default Why are trusses being used in homes

On Jan 3, 5:23*am, Art Todesco wrote:
On 1/2/2013 8:34 PM, wrote:



Seems that every new house I see being built today are using trusses for
the roof. *I dont understand the reasoning to that. *Trusses are great
for large commercial buildings and barns, because they eliminate the
need for posts, but why are they being used on smaller homes, which have
walls under them and eliminate the need for using a truss?


Three reasons come to mind to NOT use them.
1. More lumber is needed to make a truss
2. It costs more than just using lumber
3. There is no usable attic in those homes.


In stick built homes, the attic could be turned into a nice living
space. *You can not do that with a truss roof. *So, the attic is useless
other than a place to store stuff in between all the braces.


It just seems senseless to use them on a small home. *Besides
eliminating a useful attic, the cost to build would be significantly
increased. *Not just the cost to manufacture the trusses, but also the
cost to install them, because a crane is needed to get them on top of
the house, and a crew of men to install them. *Framing a roof with plain
dimentional lumber is so much easier, as well as cheaper and one gets a
useful attic to boot..... One person can frame a roof by themselves and
no crane is needed. *WTF?


I have yet to find any GOOD reason to use them on a house!


In all the replies this was not mentioned. *With trusses, heating ducts,
etc. can be run perpendicular to the truss itself ... not so with solid
joists. *This makes the room below without bulkheads to house that
stuff. *In my house it uses trusses over the basement. *The basement
ceiling is totally flat. *So if someone wanted to finish a basement
room, it would work out well.


??? Somehow I don't picture that unless you mean running them
_through_ the bottom chord.

Harry K