Check my location: we have something in common! I'm very, very aware of seismic issues! We had an 8.8 a couple of years back... The entire country moved over a couple of meters, so some GPS maps are no longer accurate: what used to be the location of the middle of the street is now the sidewalk! So I'm big-time aware of how much things can shake, rattle and roll in a biggie, and it's scary: Fortunately, everything I designed and built myself stayed together, with no structural damage, because I do tend to over-design and over-build them. So I hear what you are saying, and I "get it" for sure!Again, we're in an earthquake zone,
You might want to consider adding isolation sway braces to your wall tops, and perhaps even seismic snubbers to the base plates, if you are really concerned and you really do get major stuff going on where you live. How big do they get? Take a look at the Mason Industries web site for some products that you might need to consider. They make a lot of isolation mounts, for all types of situations, and some of them are meant specifically for seismic stabilization.I'm a little worried things will shift from tremors and eventually create flanking paths when the bolts touch the framing plates.
Congratulations! That's a nice milestone.have even survived my first framing inspection.
Looking forward to it! But don't forget one thing: "Pics, or it didn't happen!".I'll loosen things up, pinpoint the problem and post my results.
- Stuart -