05-11-2016, 10:12 AM
My rear deck is elevated and they rest on (mostly) concrete filled steel posts.
The previous owner built a room addition on the 58 year old Douglas Fir deck. The first year I was in the house two of the deck's joists failed under the weight of the addition. I jacked up the deck and replaced the sistered-up 2" x 8" joists with a triple 2" x 8" joist. I also added a 6" x 6" pressure treated post under the joist for additional support. The post is 10 feet tall.
Last year the door to the room addition was binding and I had to jack up the joist about 3/8" to ease that binding.
All winter the door was fine, but a couple of weeks ago it started binding again.
Then we had 8 consecutive days of rain and the binding went away. So it is clear to me that moisture is the key hear.
Do you think it is because the post is drying out and is shrinking, or because the ground that it rests on is drying out and shrinking. We went down 24" with the concrete to avoid heaving.
I guess I could play a garden hose on the ground for a while to see if that resolves the issue.
Any other ideas?
Note: The concrete filled steel posts are not to code. I can use pressure treated or concrete pillars.
The previous owner built a room addition on the 58 year old Douglas Fir deck. The first year I was in the house two of the deck's joists failed under the weight of the addition. I jacked up the deck and replaced the sistered-up 2" x 8" joists with a triple 2" x 8" joist. I also added a 6" x 6" pressure treated post under the joist for additional support. The post is 10 feet tall.
Last year the door to the room addition was binding and I had to jack up the joist about 3/8" to ease that binding.
All winter the door was fine, but a couple of weeks ago it started binding again.
Then we had 8 consecutive days of rain and the binding went away. So it is clear to me that moisture is the key hear.
Do you think it is because the post is drying out and is shrinking, or because the ground that it rests on is drying out and shrinking. We went down 24" with the concrete to avoid heaving.
I guess I could play a garden hose on the ground for a while to see if that resolves the issue.
Any other ideas?
Note: The concrete filled steel posts are not to code. I can use pressure treated or concrete pillars.
No animals were injured or killed in the production of this post.