I am trying to have a bit of better understanding as to the crushing of wood fibers.
The specific problem is that we had a resident build a room addition over an existing wood deck. The deck beam at the outside perimeter is a split beam of 2-2x12. So a single 2x12 is on opposite sides of a 4x4 column which is then bolted with either two 3/8" or 1/2" through bolts ( to be field verified). There are four columns and I have guestimated that the loading at the two outside columns is about 3200 pounds and the two inside columns is about 5600 pounds. So each bolt carries between 1600 and 2800 pounds. How does this effect the beam? How does this effect the column? Are the bolts an issue for shear?
I had read that most, depending on species, wood fibers crush at 625 psi. (edited psf to psi)
The specific problem is that we had a resident build a room addition over an existing wood deck. The deck beam at the outside perimeter is a split beam of 2-2x12. So a single 2x12 is on opposite sides of a 4x4 column which is then bolted with either two 3/8" or 1/2" through bolts ( to be field verified). There are four columns and I have guestimated that the loading at the two outside columns is about 3200 pounds and the two inside columns is about 5600 pounds. So each bolt carries between 1600 and 2800 pounds. How does this effect the beam? How does this effect the column? Are the bolts an issue for shear?
I had read that most, depending on species, wood fibers crush at 625 psi. (edited psf to psi)
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