FRT (Fire Retardant Treated) plywood
was and is still in many areas required for a fire break
at the roofs for multi-family units, such as town homes,
condos, and duplexes. A firebreak is required to prevent
a fire from spreading from one unit to another. Some
units may have a masonry wall that breaks the plane of
the roof. In this case FRT may not be required. Some
areas may utilize fire rated drywall built above the
plane of the roof. Typically fire rated drywall or masonry
are used as a firebreak between units and in the adjacent
attics. When the roof sheathing breaks the plane of the
adjacent roof lines a separate firebreak is required.
This may be FRT or fire rated drywall sandwiched between
the trusses and cdx roof sheathing.
There was widespread failure of FRT manufactured throughout
much of the 1980's, part of the 1970's. Due to excessive
heat and moisture from improper ventilation the sheathing
would delaminate, and in extreme cases sag in between
the trusses In this state it could not be walked on or
roofed over. In some cases, leaks would develop due to
this failure, and the entire roof would have to be stripped
of the sheathing, and re-sheathed and re-roofed. Signs
of FRT failure may include;
- Sagging
- De lamination
- Cracking when walked on
- Dark discolored surface in the attic on the sheathing
- A hairy or furry surface in the attic on the sheathing
- When in the attic push up on the sheathing and hearing
brittle or cracking sounds
Most areas still require a fire break, either a masonry
wall that breaks the roof surface, a 5/8" fire rated
drywall layer under CDX roof sheathing, or even 5/8 fire
rated drywall on the ceilings of the top floor. There
may be other accepted methods and variations pertaining
to local codes. In our area FRT or some sort of fire
break is still required by the code. The newer FRT has
been successfully updated with a buffer as well as in
conjunction with updated attic ventilation.
A problem we are seeing now is where contractors are
coming in and stripping off the shingles and sheathing
and replacing it with regular CDX. This is basically
removing the firebreak on these units, and should be
replaced with a proper firebreak.
In cases where the sheathing is sagging, a temporary
fix may be used. This involves using 2 x 4 blocks or
larger, installed between the trusses, tight to the sheathing,
in a ladder pattern. The spacing of the blocks will depend
on the severity of the de lamination and cracking, typically
24" on center. Another method is to rip sheets of 3/4
cdx plywood the width of the bay between the trusses.
This needs to be installed tightly to the roof sheathing.
The protruding shingle fasteners may impede this installation.
Once the plywood is installed tight to the roof sheathing
2 x 3" cleats are fastened to the sides of the truss
to support 3/4" plywood. |