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- Dwang abstract "In construction, a nogging or nogging piece (England, Australia), dwang (Scotland, South Island, New Zealand,) blocking (North America), or noggin (North Island, New Zealand),. They are also simply called nogs in New Zealand and Australia (No reference). They are horizontal bracing pieces used between wall studs or floor joists to give rigidity to the wall or floor frames of a building. Noggings may be made of timber, steel, or aluminium. If made of timber they are cut slightly longer than the space they fit into, and are driven into place so they fit tightly or are rebated into the wall stud.The interval between noggings is dictated by local building codes and by the type of timber used; a typical timber-framed house in a non-cyclonic area will have two or three noggings per storey between each pair of neighbouring studs. Additional noggings may be added as grounds for later fixings.Noggings between vertical studs generally brace the studs against buckling under load; noggings on floor joists prevent the joists from twisting or rotating under load (lateral-torsional buckling), and are often fixed at intervals, in pairs diagonally for that reason. In floors this type of bracing is also called herringbone strutting.Noggings provide no bracing effect in shear and are generally supplemented by diagonal bracing to prevent the frame from racking.".
- Dwang thumbnail Dwang.gif?width=300.
- Dwang wikiPageID "2376008".
- Dwang wikiPageLength "2842".
- Dwang wikiPageOutDegree "22".
- Dwang wikiPageRevisionID "656143857".
- Dwang wikiPageWikiLink Australia.
- Dwang wikiPageWikiLink Blocking_(construction).
- Dwang wikiPageWikiLink Buckling.
- Dwang wikiPageWikiLink Building_code.
- Dwang wikiPageWikiLink Carpentry.
- Dwang wikiPageWikiLink Category:Carpentry.
- Dwang wikiPageWikiLink Category:Construction_terminology.
- Dwang wikiPageWikiLink Category:Structural_system.
- Dwang wikiPageWikiLink Construction.
- Dwang wikiPageWikiLink England.
- Dwang wikiPageWikiLink File:Dwang.gif.
- Dwang wikiPageWikiLink Herringbone_strutting.
- Dwang wikiPageWikiLink Joist.
- Dwang wikiPageWikiLink North_Island.
- Dwang wikiPageWikiLink North_Island,_New_Zealand.
- Dwang wikiPageWikiLink Scotland.
- Dwang wikiPageWikiLink Shear_stress.
- Dwang wikiPageWikiLink South_Island.
- Dwang wikiPageWikiLink South_Island,_New_Zealand.
- Dwang wikiPageWikiLink Timber-framed_house.
- Dwang wikiPageWikiLink Timber_framing.
- Dwang wikiPageWikiLink Wall_stud.
- Dwang wikiPageWikiLinkText "blocking".
- Dwang wikiPageWikiLinkText "dwang".
- Dwang wikiPageWikiLinkText "nogging".
- Dwang wikiPageWikiLinkText "noggings".
- Dwang hasPhotoCollection Dwang.
- Dwang wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Architecture-stub.
- Dwang wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:For.
- Dwang wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Mergeto.
- Dwang subject Category:Carpentry.
- Dwang subject Category:Construction_terminology.
- Dwang subject Category:Structural_system.
- Dwang type Article.
- Dwang type Article.
- Dwang comment "In construction, a nogging or nogging piece (England, Australia), dwang (Scotland, South Island, New Zealand,) blocking (North America), or noggin (North Island, New Zealand),. They are also simply called nogs in New Zealand and Australia (No reference). They are horizontal bracing pieces used between wall studs or floor joists to give rigidity to the wall or floor frames of a building. Noggings may be made of timber, steel, or aluminium.".
- Dwang label "Dwang".
- Dwang sameAs m.077j2j.
- Dwang sameAs Q5317868.
- Dwang sameAs Q5317868.
- Dwang wasDerivedFrom Dwang?oldid=656143857.
- Dwang depiction Dwang.gif.
- Dwang isPrimaryTopicOf Dwang.