How to Read Your Roof Truss Engineering Plans

What Are Engineered Floor Trusses?

If you’ve ever opened a roof truss engineering packet and felt lost, you’re not alone. Even experienced contractors sometimes pause when reading Florida truss diagrams. The drawings look technical because they are, but the basics are easy to understand once you know what you’re looking at.

This guide walks you through the essentials so you can read your roof truss engineering plans with confidence.

Start With the Truss Placement Plan

Your placement plan is the bird’s-eye layout of the house. Each truss is labeled with an ID such as G1, G2, T1, or H5. These labels match the individual truss sheets that follow. A few quick tips:

  • Look for the bearing walls. They’re usually highlighted or marked with a thick line.
  • Check the span direction. Trusses always run from bearing to bearing.
  • Note any girder trusses. These are heavier trusses that carry other trusses and are often marked “GIRDER” or “GD.”

If you understand the placement plan, everything else falls into place.

Know the Parts of a Truss

Every truss sheet shows the physical shape. You’ll see a few main parts:

  • Top chord: The upper members that form the roof slope. This is where the roof sheathing attaches.
  • Bottom chord: The flat lower member. It acts like a ceiling joist.
  • Webs: The interior members that create the truss’s triangular structure.
  • Panels: The spaces between joints. These matter because loads transfer through each panel.

When energy codes require raised-heel trusses, you’ll also see a taller heel at the bearing. In Florida, that’s common.

Read the Key Symbols

Most truss sheets use standard, repeatable symbols:

  • Triangles or circles at joints mark connector plate locations.
  • Dashed lines often show bracing requirements or load paths.
  • Arrows pointing down mark gravity loads.
  • Arrows pointing up mark uplift forces.
  • “B.C. Bearing” or similar text tells you where each end of the truss must sit.
  • “SL” stands for “slope.” For example, SL 4/12 means the roof rises 4 inches for every 12 inches of run.

If you see a symbol you don’t recognize, check the legend in the packet. Manufacturers stay consistent.

Understand Load Ratings

Florida’s building code has strict load requirements. On each truss sheet, you’ll see:

  • Top chord live load (TCLL): The weight from temporary loads like workers, equipment, or rain before the roof is sealed.
  • Top chord dead load (TCDL): The permanent weight of shingles, sheathing, underlayment, and so on.
  • Bottom chord loads: These matter when you’re hanging drywall, adding insulation, or finishing a ceiling.
  • Wind uplift values: Shown in pounds per square foot (psf). These tell you the uplift the truss must resist during a storm.

If anything seems low or high, ask. Loads are one of the most important parts of the plan.

Read the Bracing Requirements

Bracing is one area many homeowners overlook. In Florida, it matters even more. You’ll see:

  • CLB or continuous lateral bracing lines on certain webs.
  • Diagonal bracing lines running across several trusses.
  • T3, T4, or similar notes for permanent bracing types.
  • “By others” next to certain braces. This means they must be installed in the field.

Bracing keeps the truss from buckling. It must be installed exactly as shown. If you skip a brace, the truss can’t carry the loads it’s designed for.

Pay Attention to Wind Uplift Notes

Florida’s wind maps require engineered uplift resistance for each building zone. Your sheets will show:

  • The design wind speed (often 140–170 mph depending on county).
  • Whether it’s Exposure B, C, or D.
  • The uplift reaction at each bearing point.

The uplift numbers matter when selecting the right hurricane ties or hold-downs. If the reaction shows 800 pounds, your connector must resist at least that.

Review the “Special Notes” Section

Every truss sheet has a cluster of notes at the bottom. These cover things like:

  • Required overhangs
  • Plate sizes
  • Heel heights
  • Installation reminders
  • Field modifications (usually “not allowed” unless approved)

It’s easy to ignore this section, but it often answers questions that come up during framing.

Match the Sheet to the Field

Each truss will have its ID printed on the physical truss. Before you set it:

  • Check the ID marking.
  • Check the span.
  • Check the bearing points.
  • Confirm that the slope matches the plan.

If something doesn’t match, stop and call the truss supplier. It’s much easier to fix a mismatch before the truss is installed.

Final Thoughts

Truss engineering plans look technical at first glance, but once you know what the symbols and notes mean, they’re straightforward. Take your time with the placement plan, learn the key parts of each truss, and always pay attention to load and bracing notes. If you ever have questions, Park Place Truss is here to help you build safely and confidently.