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Around page 34north star said:$ > < $Nope !........My work computer has a very high security level
and it will not allow me to view your pics.
Is it possible for you to describe in words what you are seeking ?
Maybe I can search for it that way.
$ > < $
I would bet that it is a rated floor by the concrete topping...Francis Vineyard said:It's a slide presentation that shows a 2hr. rated shaft constructed similarly as an exterior wall rated for exposure to both sides with a non-rated floor penetration. A doulbe row of 2x blocking between the floor joist above the top plate to the underside of the floor deck permitted to continue the fire rating instead of the fire rated gypsum being continuous in the concealed spaces below the floor decking and above the ceiling as typically shown in the code commentary.
It is not what is on top of the floor that gives it a rating but what is underneath the floor (ceiling) that provides protection for the floorsteveray said:I would bet that it is a rated floor by the concrete topping...
Correct....but typically when I see that floor/ ceiling design it is for wood framed apartments with the required rated tenant separation...It also usually has resilient channel underneath.mtlogcabin said:It is not what is on top of the floor that gives it a rating but what is underneath the floor (ceiling) that provides protection for the floorWe see gyp-crete all the time for sound not fire
The calculations in IBC 721.6 max out at 1hr for prescriptive wood fire resistance.....IMO beyond that you would need a listed assembly or convince me otherwise...TJacobs said:The AWC is going under the assumption that if wood burns at a rate of 1.5 inches an hour, then (2) 2x's will last 2 hours. Just my opinion. Not a UL-listed assembly AFAIK.
Another history buff It was a good and thorough article. still have a copy, somewhereYikes said:In the September/October 1982 issue of Building Standards, then-ICBO staff engineer Paul Sheedy proposed this same kind of detail (solid blocking) in Figure 13 of an article called "Area Separation Walls Revisited". They would typically solid block using three 2x (to get over 3 1/2" thickness of solid wood). If I remember correctly, this article was referenced in subsequent editions of the "UBC Q and A code Applications Manual" and perhaps even the UBC Commentary.
http://www.thebuildingcodeforum.com/forum/attachments/commercial-building-codes/1181d1326487114-fire-rated-construction-sheedy-fig13.jpgYikes said:In the September/October 1982 issue of Building Standards, then-ICBO staff engineer Paul Sheedy proposed this same kind of detail (solid blocking) in Figure 13 of an article called "Area Separation Walls Revisited". They would typically solid block using three 2x (to get over 3 1/2" thickness of solid wood). If I remember correctly, this article was referenced in subsequent editions of the "UBC Q and A code Applications Manual" and perhaps even the UBC Commentary.