IvanCyr Posted May 24, 2016 Share Posted May 24, 2016 Good day, I do mainly modelling in Chief and my framing expert on Chief is away on vacation. I was wondering if I could solicit some assistance. It is a framing question regarding why Chief builds the trusses shown on page A7 of the attached file the way it does and how I can force the software to build it differently. Effectively, looking at the layout page A7 or the quick screen shot provided in the attachment below will indicate that the trusses are loaded at their bases as a shear stress. Clearly a compression fit would provide a more structurally sound design. The next joint above is auto generated in a similar manner. Is there a quick fix to auto generate the trusses in a more favourable manner? I would attach the plans.....but for some reason it won't upload (it is a very small cabin type design)....I'm sure there's a reason that I've simply forgotten. I'll look into why that is.....why it won't upload....not why I've forgotten cuz I'm sure age might have something to do with it! Thanks, Ivan BunkieF.layout Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
IvanCyr Posted May 24, 2016 Author Share Posted May 24, 2016 2nd try.....please find attached a zip folder with the plan file. Ivan ZippedFileF.zip Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Richard_Morrison Posted May 24, 2016 Share Posted May 24, 2016 There are no trusses that I can see. However, the rafters are simply following the lines of the roof. The condition where they meet the floor is simply the condition of the fascia at the floor, and is the way the model was built. You will probably be better off just making a p-solid for each rafter to get the cuts to be correct. (Make one and copy it.) I don't know of any way to get a horizontal flat condition at the fascia to get things to auto-frame correctly. A user-defined roof edge angle would be a good suggestion for the program, though! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ShaneK Posted May 24, 2016 Share Posted May 24, 2016 Attach plan file. Previous attachments have been layout files. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
IvanCyr Posted May 24, 2016 Author Share Posted May 24, 2016 Hi Shane. First post had layout files....the second post in is "me" again....with the .plan file attached in a zipped folder. Was that what you were looking for? Ivan Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
IvanCyr Posted May 24, 2016 Author Share Posted May 24, 2016 There are no trusses that I can see. However, the rafters are simply following the lines of the roof. The condition where they meet the floor is simply the condition of the fascia at the floor, and is the way the model was built. You will probably be better off just making a p-solid for each rafter to get the cuts to be correct. (Make one and copy it.) I don't know of any way to get a horizontal flat condition at the fascia to get things to auto-frame correctly. A user-defined roof edge angle would be a good suggestion for the program, though! Thx Richard for providing some feedback. I was hoping Chief would "create" some simple type truss I suppose....at least with some minimalistic reality to the load bearing surfaces! There are about 7 different trusses due to the dormers....so cut and paste is of little value. I agree about the user defined roof edge angle....it would be nice. Ivan Might anyone else have a different workaround or a preset/default input that they could suggest? Thx in advance. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ShaneK Posted May 24, 2016 Share Posted May 24, 2016 Like Richard suggested, I used p-solids. BunkieF.plan Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
IvanCyr Posted May 24, 2016 Author Share Posted May 24, 2016 Ah....seems simple enough on the ends....but the cut and paste method doesn't do much good when one gets to the dormers and 48" skylight..... Shane, I'm going to send you a PM. Ivan Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ShaneK Posted May 24, 2016 Share Posted May 24, 2016 Girder truss on each side of dormer, conventional frame between girders for floor and roof rafters. Skylight is in this conventional frame area. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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