Wind Classification and Load Width in MGP10 Span Tables
Two inputs quietly decide a surprising amount of your span, and both are easy to get wrong: the wind classification of your site, and the load width each member carries. Misjudge either and every number you read afterwards is for the wrong situation.
Wind classification (N1–N4, C1–C4)
Wind classification rates how much wind load a building must resist at its particular site. Non-cyclonic regions use N1 to N4; cyclonic regions use C1 to C4. A higher class means stronger winds, which affects member spans (especially on the roof) and the tie-down and bracing design.
Load width: FLW and RLW
Load width is how much floor or roof a single member has to carry down to its supports:
- Floor Load Width (FLW) — the slice of floor a bearer (or similar) supports, broadly half the joist span each side.
- Roof Load Width (RLW) — the slice of roof a roof member supports.
Why load width swings the span
Load width directly sets the load on the member. Carry twice the area and you carry roughly twice the load, which sharply shortens the span a given size can manage. This is why the bearer and roof tables are organised around load width in the first place — and why a careless FLW or RLW estimate quietly produces an unsafe result.
Getting both right
- Have your wind classification assessed properly for the site.
- Work out the load width each member carries from your actual framing layout.
- Read the table column for your wind class and load width — not the default.
The Span Spec Builder prompts you for wind class and load width so they never get left out of your lookup.
Keep going
Apply this to bearers and roof members, then run through the common mistakes checklist.
Frequently asked questions
What is wind classification?
How do I find my wind classification?
What is the difference between FLW and RLW?
Why does load width change the span so much?
Keep reading
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Use the Span Spec Builder to assemble the exact parameters for this member, ready for the official tables or your engineer.
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