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Joiner
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Trouble then is, the bow will put the joist hangers out of true.
I've fitted wall plates in stone barns where you'd be hard-pushed to find a straight line. We put the upper storeys in using 1/2" (it was that long ago) threaded rod epoxy'd into the masonry, and packing to give a tight fix. The nuts and washers were counter-bored flush and a 2" board (slotted to take the joists) glued and screwed (again, counter-bored and plugged) to the face. It was all oak so looked of a piece when done. The gaps where the first plate didn't meet the wall were just lime mortared to match the existing.
The reason for using epoxy is to avoid the pressure of something like a rawlbolt splitting the stone/brickwork. The pressure created by them is incredible. I'd made a new iron ladder to fit into the tower of Broncroft Castle (privately owned, it's down the Corvedale in Shropshire) and as I tightened the second rawlbolt a hairline crack appeared in the bloody great slab of sandstone. I backed that off pretty smartish.
Maybe the SE does see something no one can see, he is on site after all, so perhaps a closer questioning of his reasoning might be in order. If his only concern is getting around the chimney breast then he really shouldn't be doing this kind of work until he's got his knees a bit browner.
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