Portion of the end wall above the eave line of a double sloped roof.
Hip roof truss terminology.
Hip end trusses that are supported by hip truss and creates hip plane.
The gable roof provides for the most basic of roof systems.
Hip end trusses that are supported by truncated girder and creates hip plane.
Typical framing systems gable.
Creates roof plane by scotching over main trusses.
Each hip truss has the same span and overhang as the adjacent standard trusses but decreases in height with the top and bottom chords of its center portion parallel to each other and horizontal.
Hip roofs on houses could have two triangular sides and two trapezoidal ones.
Roof constructed with rafters or trusses pitched over all perimeter walls.
Girder truss that creates dutch hip style roof by supporting hips and jacks trusses.
Hip truss this forms the hip line of the roof.
Truss terminology technical terms used in the truss industry may not be familiar.
If the roof eave extends beyond the gable end wall by more than 1 then a dropped gable is normally used.
They are almost always at the same pitch or slope which makes them symmetrical about the centerlines.
A gable roof has vertical planes usually on the.
This extends over the truncated girder truss and finishes as the top of the hip.
Some of the more common are listed below and are illustrated on pages 3 4.
Intersection of two roof surfaces over an external corner of a building.
A hip roof hip roof or hipped roof is a type of roof where all sides slope downwards to the walls usually with a fairly gentle slope.
It is similar to a half truss but has an extended top chord.
A hip roof on a rectangular plan has four faces.