“My dad told me about them!”: TDA roof trusses

Blog Post
TDA roof truss diagram

Article updated on 31 January 2024

Before we had the trussed roofs we commonly use today, the prototype was developed in the 1950s when resources were still in short supply following the war.

The roof was made up of 'TDA' trusses positioned at 1.8 to 2.4m centres with rafters and ceiling joists between them at 450mm centres and could span up to 8m:

Roof truss diagram
Picture courtesy of R Chudley & R Greeno

The TDA trusses were built on-site using toothed plate connectors and were based on standard designs that were published by the Timber Development Association (TDA), the forerunner of the Timber Research And Development Association (TRADA).

The trusses supported purlins and binders, which in turn supported rafters and ceiling joists.

They mirrored the principles of the impressive oak Queen Post and King Post trusses (below) used since the sixteenth century, but with much smaller timber sections and were not intended to be visible, as a ceiling was fitted beneath rather than at rafter level. Like trusses today, they can’t be modified without weakening the roof.

Queen Post and King Post trusses
Picture courtesy of Oaktimberframing.com

As timber development continued, they evolved into today’s roof trusses that use much smaller timber sizes at smaller centres but are restrained through additional bracing.

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Please Note: Every care was taken to ensure the information was correct at the time of publication. Any written guidance provided does not replace the user’s professional judgement. It is the responsibility of the dutyholder or person carrying out the work to ensure compliance with relevant building regulations or applicable technical standards.

Comments

Great info

Submitted 1 year 9 months ago

My house has this type of roof truss would love to know if I could take the braces out

LABC response

Submitted 1 year 8 months ago

Hi.

Thank you for your comment. It is unlikely that you will be able to remove the braces from your roof trusses. If it is possible, this will be a substantial structural alteration and you should appoint a suitably competent structural engineer to advise you and help with your building regulation application to the local authority.

Best,
LABC team

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