spearson92
Established Member
Hi all,
I've turned to the forums for some advice on shed rafters.
I'm currently building my workshop/shed in a funny part of the garden. It's forced me to make a wedge shaped building, with the wider end being about 2.9m, and the narrow end about 1.4m. It's about 4.9m in length measured on the front of the shed. It's a pent roof style, and the pitch angle on the wider side is 7 degrees, with the narrow end being 13 degrees.
My question is: for these kind of shallow pitch angles, do the rafters need birdsmouth cuts in them, or can they be fastened to the top-plate straight off with hangers/brackets? I was planning to have one rafter at each end sat on the frame, but these would then sit slightly higher than those that have birdsmouth cuts unless I shave a bit off, is that correct? The frame by the way is 38x89mm c16 frame.
Any help and advice would be greatly appreciated! Already enough of a job having to measure each rafter angle separately :shock:
Cheers,
Steve
I've turned to the forums for some advice on shed rafters.
I'm currently building my workshop/shed in a funny part of the garden. It's forced me to make a wedge shaped building, with the wider end being about 2.9m, and the narrow end about 1.4m. It's about 4.9m in length measured on the front of the shed. It's a pent roof style, and the pitch angle on the wider side is 7 degrees, with the narrow end being 13 degrees.
My question is: for these kind of shallow pitch angles, do the rafters need birdsmouth cuts in them, or can they be fastened to the top-plate straight off with hangers/brackets? I was planning to have one rafter at each end sat on the frame, but these would then sit slightly higher than those that have birdsmouth cuts unless I shave a bit off, is that correct? The frame by the way is 38x89mm c16 frame.
Any help and advice would be greatly appreciated! Already enough of a job having to measure each rafter angle separately :shock:
Cheers,
Steve