Apa performance rated rim board, The apa glued floor system – Georgia-Pacific APA Engineered Wood Construction Guide - Floors User Manual

Page 8

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Floor Construction

ENGINEERED WOOD CONSTRUCTION GUIDE

FORM NO. E30V

© 2011 APA – THE ENGINEERED WOOD ASSOCIATION

WWW.APAWOOD.ORG

35

APA Performance Rated Rim Board

®

A Rim Board is the wood component that fills the space between the sill plate and bottom plate

of a wall or, in second floor construction, between the top plate and bottom plate of two wall sec-
tions. The Rim Board must match the depth of the framing members between floors or between the
floor and foundation to function properly. In addition to supporting the wall loads, the Rim Board
ties the floor joists together. It is an integral component in an engineered wood system because it
transfers both vertical bearing and lateral forces.

While lumber has been the traditional product used for Rim Boards, it is generally not compatible with the depth of the new

generation of wood I-joists used in floor construction. With the increasing use of wood I-joists, a demand for compatible

engineered wood Rim Boards has resulted.

APA Performance Rated Rim Boards can be manufactured using plywood, oriented strand board (OSB), glulam, or

structural composite lumber (SCL). These engineered wood Rim Boards have less shrinkage than lumber and match
the depth of wood I-joists and other engineered wood framing products. They are available in lengths up to 24 feet,
depending on the product used.

APA Performance Rated Rim Boards are manufactured in accordance with

Voluntary Product Standards PS 1

or

PS 2

, or

ANSI/AITC A190.1

and meet the requirements of

ANSI/APA PRR 410 Standard for Performance-Rated Engineered Wood Rim

Boards

or

APA PRR-401 Performance Standard for APA EWS Rim Boards

. ANSI/APA PRR 410 and APA PRR-401 meet or exceed

the requirements given in the

ICC ES Acceptance Criteria for Wood-Based Rim Board Products, AC124

.

As glued engineered wood products, APA Rim Boards have greater dimensional stability, higher strength, increased

structural reliability, more consistent quality and a lower tendency to check or split than sawn lumber.

The APA Glued Floor System

The APA Glued Floor System

is based on thoroughly tested
gluing techniques and field-
applied construction adhesives
that firmly and permanently
secure a layer of wood struc-
tural panels to wood joists.

Stagger end joints

APA RATED STURD-I-FLOOR

or APA RATED SHEATHING

2x rim joist

or APA Rim

Board

1/8" spacing is

recommended at all edge

and end joints unless

otherwise indicated by

panel manufacturer

2x joists,

I-joists or floor

trusses – 16", 19.2",

24", or 32" o.c.

(4x supports for

48" o.c. spacing)

FIGURE 4

APA GLUED FLOOR SYSTEM

Strength axis

Site-applied glue,

both joints and

tongue-and-

groove joints (or

between panels

and edge

blocking)

Tongue-and-groove

edges (or 2" lumber

blocking between

supports)

Notes:

1. Provide

adequate moisture

control and use

ground cover vapor

retarder in crawl

space. Panels must be

dry before applying finish

floor.

2. For buildings with wood or steel

framed walls, provide 3/4" temporary

expansion joints with separate floor framing

members and discontinuous wall plates over the

joints, at intervals that limit continuous floor areas to 80

feet maximum in length or width, to allow for accumulated

expansion during construction in wet weather conditions.

Refer to

APA Technical Note: Temporary Expansion Joints for

Large Buildings, Form U425

, for detailed information.

2x treated

sill

Rim Board

®

is a registered trademark of APA – The Engineered Wood Association.

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