Glossary
Bay – The space between cross frame

Box frame – A system of framing where posts and wall
plates support roof trusses
Brace - Diagonal piece timber to add strength and stop
the building from racking
Bressumer - Sill supporting the upper wall above a jetty
Bridging beam - Large floor beam supporting ends of
joists
Cambered beam - Centre of the beam is higher than the
sides
Chamfer - Small surface made by taking off a flat piece
of timber at 45º
Collar Purlin - Alternative name for a crown plate
Crown Plate - Central beam which supports collared rafters
Crown Post - Post which supports the crown plate, which
is usually shaped
Cruck blades - Curved pairs of large rafters, which
reach from the floor to the ridge. Usually a matching pair are made by
splitting a curved tree in half
Dragon Beam -
Floor beam set diagonally to support a jettied floor

Draw Pegging - Method by which the peg hole in the tenon does not quite line up with the peg hole in the mortice, so when a tapered peg is driven into the joint, it closes up tightly
Girding Beam - Horizontal beam known as girth or rail,
at level of upper floor
Green Oak - Freshly felled oak still with a high moisture
content.
Jettied Building - A building in which each floor overhangs
the floor below. Seen in many timber framed town houses and also Wealdon
style buildings
Joists - Members in the floor that support the floorboards
Jowl Post -Flared head of main post, which enables the
joining of wall plate and tie beam

King Post - Central post in a truss used to support
the tie beam
Mortice and Tenon - Common joint for connecting two
pieces of timber together
Passing brace - Brace pegged across vertical or horizontal
timbers
Peg - Wooden pin used to connect the joints in a frame
Principle Rafter - Main diagonal beam in the truss
Purlin - Horizontal roof timbers which support the rafters

Queen Posts - A pair of timbers in a truss, used to
support the principle rafter by the purlins
Rafters - Timbers from wall plate to apex
Ridge - Horizontal timber supporting top ends of rafters
Scarf Joint - Used to connect two lengths of timber
together to form one continuous length

Scribing - A method of marking
out joints on out of square timber
Sill - Horizontal bottom timber of window frame
Spandrel - Space between jointed post, brace and beam
Tie Beam - Horizontal beam that ties the wallplates
together and also forms main part of a truss
Trusses - A frames in the roof which take the load from
the purlins
Wind brace - Brace from principal rafter to purlin which
strengthens roof structure and stops the trusses from racking
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