The next time you hold a square dance or weight-lifting contest on your deck, you’ll rest easier knowing you used joist hangers and installed them the right way. For it’s these diminutive little powerhouses that keep your decks and other floors strong as wood dries, shrinks, twists and ages.
Joist hangers are metal connectors designed to solidly anchor the joists in floors, decks or ceilings to beams and other framing members throughout your home. Properly installed, they make a joint far stronger than nails would alone.
Selecting the correct joist hangers and hanging (or “setting”) them is pretty straightforward. We’ll show you a four-step method for installing joist hangers that will ensure that your floor or deck stays flat and strong-and meets the requirements of your building inspector and the joist hanger manufacturer.
Selecting The Right Joist Hanger For The Job
Joist hangers come in many sizes to
support different dimensional sizes
of lumber and I-joists. The hangers
you’ll find at home centers typically
have a galvanized coating and will
work indoors and out. Most
homeowners will use the common
face-mounting type (Fig. A), but
specialized hangers are available for
unusual situations, such as building
in a corrosive salt-air environment
or joists that run at an angle. The performance specifications for
each type of hanger are carefully
engineered and tested to meet the
approval of local building codes.
For the performance they deliver and their installation speed, joist hangers are a bargain. Joist hangers are sold according to the size of joists or beams they fit and their load capacity. Single joist hangers, whether they’re for 2x8s or 2x10s, cost about $1 apiece. Double hangers (for carrying doubled joists) for 2x8s or 2x10s cost closer to $3 apiece.
Home centers and lumberyards typically stock the most common hangers and can order the oddball types and sizes. They also distribute simple and informative brochures that tell you which hanger to buy for which use (like for building a small deck). For bigger projects, pick up a free joist hanger product catalog that lists each manufacturer’s hanger types and their uses and load ratings. These catalogs list phone hotlines for engineering help. Manufacturers won’t design your project for you, but they’ll answer technical questions about specific joist hangers.
Install Hangers Right-The Firsttime
When I worked construction, I
would have lively discussions with
carpenters who stubbornly held onto
myths about proper joist hanger
installation. Avoid installation
mistakes by following the techniques
shown in Photos 1-5:
Install the largest hanger that fits the lumber. Never use a 2x6 hanger on a 2x10 joist. Avoid disaster by spending a couple of bucks more for the correct joist hanger.
Fill all the holes in each joist hanger with the properly designated size nail. After you’ve hung 12 hangers on a wall ledger and your arm has turned to rubber, avoid the temptation to save your body by leaving some nail holes in each hanger unfilled.
Don’t reuse joist hangers, and don’t modify them by cutting them shorter or bending their outside flanges (such as around the edge of the wall ledger and nailing into its end grain). Installing reused or modified joist hangers reduces their load capacity. Nailing into end grain will lessen the nail’s holding power by one-third.
Nails Do Matter
As you can see from Photo 6, using
3-1/2 in. long 16d nails to secure a
hanger to a wall ledger gives you
added strength. The long nails bite
into the framing members behind
the ledger for maximum holding
power.
To obtain the full load-bearing capacity of a joist hanger, install the length and size of nail specified by the hanger manufacturer. For interior framing, that means using only the thicker 10d, 12d or 16d common nails (rather than skinnier sinker nails) to fasten a joist hanger’s face flange to wall ledgers, headers and beams. Outdoors use 16d double-dipped galvanized nails (or stainless steel when called for) for installing hangers. It’s true that hot-dipped galvanized box nails aren’t as thick as common nails, but they are the acknowledged choice for outdoor work.
Indoors or out, for standard-type single joist hangers, use only 1-1/2 in. joist hanger nails for nailing into the side of the joist (Photo 5); for double hangers, use 8d or 10d nails. For double shear single hangers (Photo 4), fasten the hanger to the joist(s) with longer 8d or 10d nails. This type of hanger requires fewer but longer nails for the side flanges. The nails penetrate into the wall ledger and therefore offer both better joist load capacity than standard-duty hangers and more protection against uplift forces caused by wind.
The manufacturers agree: Never use galvanized deck screws or drywall screws to install joist hangers. Those screws don’t have the shank size and toughness to support joist loads.

Click image to enlarge.
1. Toenail decking joists into
position along the wall ledger
using a galvanized 16d nail.
Make sure the top of the joist is even
with the top of the flashing on the
wall ledger so that decking will go
on evenly. For outdoor work, use
hot-dipped galvanized nails; for
indoors, use common (not sinkertype)
nails. Start your nail before
setting the joist in position, then
hammer it in.

Click image to enlarge.
2. Squeeze the joist hanger
tightly around the joist and
drive the speed prongs into
the ledger board to temporarily hold
the joist in place. Make sure the joist
is sitting squarely in the joist hanger
without gaps alongside and under
the joist.

Click image to enlarge.
3. Fasten the joist hangers to
wall ledgers outdoors using
16d galvanized nails. For the
joist hanger to perform to its rated
load capacity, fill all holes in the joist
flanges with the nails specified by
the hanger manufacturer.

Click image to enlarge.
4. For double shear joist hangers, toenail four galvanized 10d nails at a
45-degree angle through the hanger, the joist and into the ledger board.

Click image to enlarge.
5. For standard joist hangers, secure the hanger to the joist using only 1-1/2
in. long galvanized joist hanger nails. Avoid longer nails that would poke through the joist and splay out the other side of the hanger. (To hammer inside tight joist spaces,
use either short tapping strokes or hold the hammer sideways and strike the nail with the side of the hammer.)
OR

Click image to enlarge.
6. Use inverted flange single or double joist hangers to install joists
at the very end of a ledger board. To avoid splitting the outside edge of
the wall ledger, predrill the holes for the 16d galvanized nails.




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