SlowSteve
Established Member
Hello.
I am in the process of sorting out my loft. Officially this is purely out of love and affection for Mrs SlowSteve, but it does mean that vast amounts of tat and junk get removed from my workshop, so it's not all self-less.
I live in a semi and it's an old house with a "proper" roof - all the rafters are slow growth 4x2's and there's a huge 12 x 6 collar beams all the way around - an amazing piece of 100 year old joinery.
However, the actual joists which make up the "floor" of the loft are only 3x2's, and so when I walk on them I get ceiling cracks in the upstairs room as the plasterboard is nailed on directly ( maybe a sign I should eat less cake?)
I am looking to run a set of five 8 x 3's into the loft, bolt them onto the shared will with joist hangers and cantilever them over the load bearing internal walls - which are solid brick. Then build a floor over this. This means that I don't put any load onto the floor joists, and it gives me the height to keep all the insultation in the loft as well.
My issue is that I need runs of 19 foot for the joists, but I can only maneuver beams of 10 foot into the loft as I have to get them upstairs, up the loft hatch and not hit the tiles. So - I need to take the joists up in sections of about 10 foot and join them up there.
I was wondering how you guys would go about doing this? I need strength, but also that strength needs to last a long time. I was thinking about cutting half lap joints ( although I have no idea how big these should be ) on the ground, then gluing them in the loft, and then either doweling them or using fishplates for extra strength. I don't know if this is massively over-engineered or not engineered enough?
I have no plans to use the loft as a room - it's a junk store - so will only see moderate use.
Any idea's, thoughts or experiences you have would be hugely appreciated.
Many thanks
Steve
I am in the process of sorting out my loft. Officially this is purely out of love and affection for Mrs SlowSteve, but it does mean that vast amounts of tat and junk get removed from my workshop, so it's not all self-less.
I live in a semi and it's an old house with a "proper" roof - all the rafters are slow growth 4x2's and there's a huge 12 x 6 collar beams all the way around - an amazing piece of 100 year old joinery.
However, the actual joists which make up the "floor" of the loft are only 3x2's, and so when I walk on them I get ceiling cracks in the upstairs room as the plasterboard is nailed on directly ( maybe a sign I should eat less cake?)
I am looking to run a set of five 8 x 3's into the loft, bolt them onto the shared will with joist hangers and cantilever them over the load bearing internal walls - which are solid brick. Then build a floor over this. This means that I don't put any load onto the floor joists, and it gives me the height to keep all the insultation in the loft as well.
My issue is that I need runs of 19 foot for the joists, but I can only maneuver beams of 10 foot into the loft as I have to get them upstairs, up the loft hatch and not hit the tiles. So - I need to take the joists up in sections of about 10 foot and join them up there.
I was wondering how you guys would go about doing this? I need strength, but also that strength needs to last a long time. I was thinking about cutting half lap joints ( although I have no idea how big these should be ) on the ground, then gluing them in the loft, and then either doweling them or using fishplates for extra strength. I don't know if this is massively over-engineered or not engineered enough?
I have no plans to use the loft as a room - it's a junk store - so will only see moderate use.
Any idea's, thoughts or experiences you have would be hugely appreciated.
Many thanks
Steve