This often happens by exposing the collar beams also called collar ties.
Finished attic with exposed collar ties.
Collar ties or ridge straps to resist wind uplift shall be connected in the upper third of the attic space and of a a minimum of 1x4 spaced no more than 4 feet on center.
Bolts are the best fasteners for the rafter collar tie connection.
Stately attractive and open.
Collar ties may take up space in the attic of your home but they are there for a reason.
This will cause them to dig in as the rafter pushes out.
The exposed beam ceiling look is one that many owners of conventional flat ceilings desperately want.
Collar ties shall be a minimum of 1 inch by 4 inches 25 mm by 102 mm nominal spaced not more than 4 feet 1219 mm on center.
There are collar ties the 1 x 1 5 horizontal beams you can see in the photos nailed in roughly.
If you nail the collar tie to the rafter use plenty of 16d commons and angle them toward the center of the building.
The 2015 international residential code does not require collar ties or collar beams.
Fortuitously exposed beams are a very popular interior design trend and also make master bedrooms feel much larger than they actually are.
This article describes and illustrates the different types of support that prevents roof sagging and wall bulging at buildings including definitions of collar ties rafter ties and structural ridge beams.
In this how it works article managing editor debra judge silber explains the role of collar and rafter ties in the framing of a roof.
You can get away with removing two out of every three collar ties because the eaves wall plate acts as a horizontal beam.
Desperately enough in fact to consider making the major step of pulling down ceiling drywall to expose joists above.
A collar tie is a tension tie in the upper third of opposing gable rafters that is intended to resist rafter separation from the ridge beam during periods of unbalanced loads such as that caused by wind uplift or unbalanced roof loads from snow.
Some of these can support the roof and prevent ridge sagging and wall spreading.
Exposed rafter ties or attic joists should be cheaper than a vaulted or cathedral ceiling that would require a large ridge beam with posts down to the foundation assuming the finishing costs are similar but it would depend on the actual design.
What the poster may have be referring to are rafter ties which are placed lower in the attic.
I m in the process of fixing up the attic of our house built originally in 1941 and the ceiling is exposed.
Another possible solution is building dormers to increase the ceiling height in select areas which has a similar effect.
Collar ties rafter ties tension beams structural ridge beams.