What Is MGP10? Machine Graded Pine Explained
MGP10 is a machine-graded pine stress grade used across Australian timber framing. Here is what the grade means, how it compares to MGP12, MGP15 and F-grades, and where it is used.
From what the grade means to reading the tables, deflection, load width, wind classification, and the mistakes that undersize a frame.
MGP10 is a machine-graded pine stress grade used across Australian timber framing. Here is what the grade means, how it compares to MGP12, MGP15 and F-grades, and where it is used.
MGP10 span tables look intimidating but follow a clear logic. Learn the inputs you need — member, size, spacing, span type, wind class, load width — and how to find the right value.
How MGP10 floor joist spans work — the role of spacing, single vs continuous span, deflection and load, plus why decks are a different case. A practical orientation, not a number to copy.
Bearers carry the joists, and their span depends heavily on floor load width. Learn how bearers, joists and posts work together and how to approach an MGP10 bearer span lookup.
Roof members add roof load width, roof mass and wind into the mix. Learn how MGP10 rafter and roof beam spans are determined and which inputs you must get right.
Lintels carry the load above doors and windows. Learn how MGP10 lintel spans are approached, why point loads change everything, and when you need an engineered beam instead.
Span tables limit deflection, not just collapse. Learn why a 'strong enough' member can still sag or bounce, what limits like L/300 mean, and why stiffness drives many MGP10 spans.
Span tables list single and continuous spans separately, and choosing the wrong column is a classic error. Learn the difference, why continuous members span further, and the catch.
Wind classification (N1–N4, C1–C4) and load width (FLW/RLW) are two inputs that quietly control your span. Learn what they are, how they're determined, and why they matter.
From reading the wrong grade to ignoring wind class and skipping the engineer, here are the most common MGP10 span table mistakes — and how to avoid building in a problem.