Molynoox
Established Member
Hi All,
I have started putting together a cantilever style pergola, made form Cedar.
The current design is as follows:
Posts: 100mm x 100mm
Spars: 2m long, 100 x 50mm
Braces: 140 x 50mm
The posts are fixed at the base on top of groundscrews, although I am not sure if I will use bolts or coach screws for that yet:
Here is a picture of the wood:
Because this is a cantilever I would like the spars on top to have a good strong fixing on the rear post because that will be in tension, and effectively holding the weight of 1.5m of cedar, which is 'pivoting' over the front post (the spacing between the posts is about 500mm). Not sure if that makes sense but you can probably get your head around it from the pictures.
I will be notching the spars to create two shoulders which should help resist the rotational movement a little, but it will still need a good fixing.
My question
What do people recommend as best method for fixing the spar in place on top from the 3 options below, red, green or blue?
GREEN - from the top
BLUE - from the rear
RED - from underneath
Screws
I will use strong exterior screws, either a spectre or timbertite, which are both green in colour, therefore visibility could be a concern against the nice cedar. Even the ones on top could be seen, if looking down from windows in the house.
Spectre: link
Timbertite: link
My thoughts
GREEN
From a purely mechanical / strength standpoint I feel that green is easily the best, but this could create a problem with water ingress. If it wasn't for water I wouldn't even be thinking about this, green is what I want to do, but worried about creating a weak point.
RED
This would need quite long screws and would be driven at an angle to get through the 6 x 2 and into the spar at the rear. This has the advantage that its quite shielded from the water. Screw head visible and could be a little unsightly.
BLUE
This is also quite shielded from water, but not sure how strong it would be and it might look unsightly for neighbors (not sure if I'm too bothered about that part, but prefer to keep it nice for them, although they are probably less sensitive than me to little details like a visible screw head)
thanks for any feedback and ideas,
Martin
I have started putting together a cantilever style pergola, made form Cedar.
The current design is as follows:
Posts: 100mm x 100mm
Spars: 2m long, 100 x 50mm
Braces: 140 x 50mm
The posts are fixed at the base on top of groundscrews, although I am not sure if I will use bolts or coach screws for that yet:
Here is a picture of the wood:
Because this is a cantilever I would like the spars on top to have a good strong fixing on the rear post because that will be in tension, and effectively holding the weight of 1.5m of cedar, which is 'pivoting' over the front post (the spacing between the posts is about 500mm). Not sure if that makes sense but you can probably get your head around it from the pictures.
I will be notching the spars to create two shoulders which should help resist the rotational movement a little, but it will still need a good fixing.
My question
What do people recommend as best method for fixing the spar in place on top from the 3 options below, red, green or blue?
GREEN - from the top
BLUE - from the rear
RED - from underneath
Screws
I will use strong exterior screws, either a spectre or timbertite, which are both green in colour, therefore visibility could be a concern against the nice cedar. Even the ones on top could be seen, if looking down from windows in the house.
Spectre: link
Timbertite: link
My thoughts
GREEN
From a purely mechanical / strength standpoint I feel that green is easily the best, but this could create a problem with water ingress. If it wasn't for water I wouldn't even be thinking about this, green is what I want to do, but worried about creating a weak point.
RED
This would need quite long screws and would be driven at an angle to get through the 6 x 2 and into the spar at the rear. This has the advantage that its quite shielded from the water. Screw head visible and could be a little unsightly.
BLUE
This is also quite shielded from water, but not sure how strong it would be and it might look unsightly for neighbors (not sure if I'm too bothered about that part, but prefer to keep it nice for them, although they are probably less sensitive than me to little details like a visible screw head)
thanks for any feedback and ideas,
Martin