 
Preservation and
Conservation
Topics: Background for Ohio Timber Framing
- Siding and Roofing -
The Barn Frame -
Saw Mills and Sawn Timber
- Timber Framing Systems -
Barn Conservation -
Foundations and Sills -
Problems of Posts
- Repair or Replacement of Plates -
Importance of Regular Inspection and Maintenance
- Windows and Doors -
Painting -
Problems
of Siding and Roofing -
Foundations and
Basements -
New Interest in Barns -
Historic Barns Main Page
Repair or Replacement of Plates
Often the most difficult repairs to accomplish in historic barns are the
repair or replacement of the wall plates where the rafters meet the wall
frame. Unfortunately this is a common area of failure in historic barns
where roofs have been allowed to leak for extended periods of time. Most
timber frame barns have rafter connections that incorporate a rafter
"seat". The cutting of the rafter seat joint typically involves the
removal of a portion of wood on the top of the plate timber creating a
perfect place for water to collect. The trapped water causes rotting
commonly not detected until the plate has suffered severe deterioration.
To make matters worse, the rot often extends into the rafters themselves
and can travel into the posts, braces and tie beams that are connected to
the plates.
Plate repair involves lifting sections of roof frame in order to allow the
damaged timber to be removed and the repair timber to be inserted.
Depending on the frame type this can be a predictable and controllable
procedure or a precarious and dangerous one. The problem comes in how the
loads are being transferred from the rafters to the frame.
In large barns the rafters are supported by timbers called purlins. These
horizontal timbers typically are placed midway between the wall plate and
the ridge. In early barns it is common for these purlins to be supported
by vertical posts that transfer the load of the roof into the tie beams.
The figure above shows this type of frame. Provided the roof frame has not been
modified, the rafters will be "birds mouthed" at the purlins which
provides a stable connection. If however the "straining beams" have been
removed (a common practice when hay tracks were added) the frame may
require stabilization before the work proceeds.


|