The Amish are still building them today.Uhhh,
Lumbermen sell Lumber do they not?
Wonder how some of the huge barns were built back in the day without engineered lumber?
My thought was to have 5 beams spaced at 2' apart to support the loft floor and 2 beams at 5' apart to tye the walls. One log will go at the edge of the loft and help support the end loft beam and support the ridge beam. proablly not needed but what the heck.I suppose it would work fine. The main purpose is to protect the wood from the weather. We get up to 200" of rain a year, and when the humidity gets down to 60% we think it's dry.
I have had some trouble with dimensional stability on some wooden guides due to moisture changes in the wood.
I use a propane torch to heat the plank and melt paraffin into the wood. Heating the wood opens the pores and gives good penetration. Much like waxing a ski.
Re guarding your cabin; I don't know if you need a building permit, but the building inspector would be a good place to get the requirements for your design.
I'm pretty sure a 4x12 would be sufficient, but you could always go deeper with a 4x14. Laminated beams are stronger because of alternating the grain between pieces, but is limited by the fasteners.
Steel increases practical strength, but, ask your fire chief, is frowned on in practice because of its failure in a fire.
Only the beam supporting the loft needs to support more than its weight, and weight supported by the beam under the loft is the weight of the beam, 1/2 the weight of the floor, and 1/2 the live load on the loft(beds, people, etc.)
If your building a building with equal wall heights on all four walls, a double pitch roof with rafters meeting at a ridge pole, you need at least the two beams you're talking about to act as collar ties; to keep the walls from spreading under the load of the roof.
Carl
Thanks Winn R that's what I was looking for.http://www.awc.org/pdf/WSDD/TOC.pdf
This is the bible for wood structures although I'm not sure you can access it all on line. You'll have lots of fun studying over it!
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