Laying out a common rafter

For simple gable or shed roofs, you need to learn this basic building block of roof framing

Laying out hip, valley, and jack rafters takes experience and skill, but if you’re building a simple gable or shed roof, all you need is the common rafter, the basic building block of roof framing.

To lay out a common rafter, you need the pitch of the roof, expressed in units of rise per foot of run. In the gable-roof example shown here, a rafter with 6-in-12 pitch rises 6 in. for every foot of run. Run is the horizontal distance that the rafter covers. For a gable roof, the run is measured from the centerline of the ridge board to the outside edge of the top of the wall.

Once you know the pitch and the total run, you can lay out the cuts of the rafter in a number of ways. The simplest method is to “step off” the layout in 1-ft. increments using a framing square.

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Stepping off the rafter

Step 1: Start at the ridge. Clamp stair gauges to the framing square to align rise and run measurements with the rafter’s top edge. Mark the first plumb line near the end of the rafter to locate the ridge cut. Then mark the first 1-ft. increment of run. Now you can “step down” the rafter to complete the total run.

Step 2: Plumb and seat cuts complete the bird’s mouth. The right-angled notch that fits over the top of the wall is called a bird’s mouth. Measuring from the plumb cut, make the level seat cut equal to the thickness of the wall assembly.

Step 3: Flip the square to mark the overhang. Many framers prefer to leave the tails long, then snap a line and cut them in place. But a simple plumb-cut rafter tail is a snap to lay out in advance: Flip the square 180° (tongue pointing downward) and step off the desired measurement from the bird’s-mouth plumb line to the end of the rafter tail.

Step 4: Trim the plumb cut to account for the ridge board. If the rafter is to be secured to a ridge board, half of the ridge board’s thickness must be removed from the top end of the rafter. Measure the difference on the body of the rafter, then mark the cutline.

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The first rafter is a pattern for the rest

Step 5: Cut the first one with extra care. This rafter will serve as a pattern for all the others, so it’s important to make precise cuts. Make sure that the blade is sharp and set square with the base of the circular saw.

Step 6: Complete the bird’s mouth with a handsaw. You’ll need the saw to cut into the corner from both sides.

Step 7: Keep crowns up when tracing the pattern. Framing lumber won’t be uniformly straight and true, so it’s good practice to orient rafters so that their crowns will face upward when they’re installed. Place the pattern over the top of each new piece of rafter stock, then mark the cuts. If you don’t have a helper, use a Quik-Grip clamp to hold the pattern rafter in place.

Photos by: Tom O'Brien; drawing by: Dan Thornton
From Fine Homebuilding 165, pp. 120-122
September 1, 2004

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