Hi all, grateful for some advice.
Just moved into a c.1900 Victorian terrace. Quickly spotted, unnoticed by the surveyor, a crack in one of the purlins. You can see failure is a combination of the purlin strut being removed for hatch installation, knot in the purlin, and heavier roof tiles than originally built. You can see there is some deflection in the purlin, though nothing visible from the outside.
My repair plan is to jack the purlin from the central supporting wall - essentially fashioning a footplate where the existing purlin strut for a prop, and cutting a similar mouthed piece of wood for the purlin end. I think it probably only needs to move 5-10mm. Then glue and bolt at 300mm centres a 2.4m length of 2x4 CLS along the back of the purlin, before then removing the prop.
Originally was planning to use an acrow between two flat, parallel surfaces as above. Though realise I could use a push-pull prop or indeed a bottlejack. Hope everything is clear from the photos - the existing purlin struts are birdmouthed onto some timber sitting on the central loadbearing brick wall. The existing boarding in the loft from the previous owner has been notched around it.
Any advice welcome!
Just moved into a c.1900 Victorian terrace. Quickly spotted, unnoticed by the surveyor, a crack in one of the purlins. You can see failure is a combination of the purlin strut being removed for hatch installation, knot in the purlin, and heavier roof tiles than originally built. You can see there is some deflection in the purlin, though nothing visible from the outside.
My repair plan is to jack the purlin from the central supporting wall - essentially fashioning a footplate where the existing purlin strut for a prop, and cutting a similar mouthed piece of wood for the purlin end. I think it probably only needs to move 5-10mm. Then glue and bolt at 300mm centres a 2.4m length of 2x4 CLS along the back of the purlin, before then removing the prop.
Originally was planning to use an acrow between two flat, parallel surfaces as above. Though realise I could use a push-pull prop or indeed a bottlejack. Hope everything is clear from the photos - the existing purlin struts are birdmouthed onto some timber sitting on the central loadbearing brick wall. The existing boarding in the loft from the previous owner has been notched around it.
Any advice welcome!

