Unread postby superpipe » Thu Nov 04, 2010 11:19 am
I'd love to see some pics of your runway. Do you setup and roll out your rubber every practice? Or are you one of the lucky ones that can leave everything setup? Aside from the higher price for me, I was worried about the strength of screwing cross brace TJI's to the long rim joist TJI's. The flange on TJI's is just too small for any real strength hold from screws. I guess the plywood top and and the fact that the cross brace TJI's touch the ground help keep the frame more stable. I still can't believe it would hold up if the whole runway had to be setup and torn down constantly as in my case. I sunk two 3" #12 stainless steal screws through my 2x10 rim joists into each end of my 2x4 cross braces. That connection will never come loose no matter how many times I move the sections.
The biggest positive for using TJI in my book, was it's flatness and straightness. Since each section would have two complete runs of rim joists touching the ground, the straighter and flatter, the better. I spent quite a bit of time and at multiple lumber places finding acceptable 2x10's for my my rim joists. No wobble at all. A disadvantage with TJI cross braces is it adds more areas of the frame touching the ground. If you didn't attach the cross braces to the rim joist perfectly flush, you just created possible wobble and decreased frame strength in the runway. These details drive me nuts.
Cool to hear about all the different ways of making it work.
Chris Mitchell
MitchellPro Vault Club