I can't cut/weld steel like John suggested but I do have a friend who can.
However, you've both jogged loose my thinking - I could rest them both on the
post, tie them together at the top and both sides with a thin Simpson plate for
tension, and use right angle brackets underneath both beams where they stop
being supported by the post to extend the support. Best of all it's all off the
shelf and galvanized (unless my friend "insists" on making me a custom one to
support the beam existing at 33 degrees ;-) ).
thanks,
jim
> On Jul 12, 2020, at 1:31 PM, Pat Horne <patintexas@icloud.com> wrote:
>
> Jim, Iâ??d try to design something heavy like they use in timber framing. If
> you use plate steel rather than sheet metal that would lay on top of the
> joint with sides on both sides of each member that could be through bolted to
> pinch the 2xs between the steel. You might consider welding the nuts in place
> so you donâ??t have to work a wrench in there while assembling.
>
> Peace,
> Pat
>
> Pat Horne
> We support Habitat for Humanity
>
>
> On Jul 12, 2020, at 11:49 AM, Jim Franklin <jamesf@groupwbench.org> wrote:
>
> Hope you're all avoiding the ridiculous heat. I am buidling a deck like
> the rest of the nation, so my tshirt tan will be well developed in a few
> weeks.
>
> I'm trying to connect two double 2x beams to each other. They meet at about
> 33 degrees from parallel. Simpson doesn't have anything that I can find that
> works outside the 45-90 range. Since any fasteners will be near the end of
> the angled beam, I'm hesitant to drive something like Ledger Loks through for
> fear of splitting it. I don't have a way to support it from underneath, it
> can only hang from the main beam with a hanger that clamps over the top, or
> be face connected in shear. The angled beam is 8.5' long so it will have
> significant weight on it if the deck ever sees people.
>
> The other end of the angled beam isn't built yet, and it will be resting on
> its own post, so I could splay them such that the end in question uses two
> separate single beam connectors, but I come up empty there too except for a
> bendable angle bracket that I won't be able to fasten on the inside angle:
>
> http://embed.widencdn.net/pdf/plus/ssttoolbox/8yq2wqljay/C-C-2019-p284.pdf
>
> The other option is to have them meet at their cut faces over a post, but the
> post is a 4x6 and I don't know if that would be enough purchase to provide
> support. I would have to fasten everything into the post; there is no
> post-to-beam connector for beams meeting at 33 degrees.
>
> thanks,
> jim
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