Advertiser Forum: The Impact of Budget Cuts Anna Stamm When I’m frustrated by something, I’ll tend to keep thinking about it, like a problem to be solved. If I can figure out why I’m so irritated, then maybe I can learn from it (rather than only complain about it). Fictional Stories and Real-Life Budgets In the past,... Read More April 2026 Issue #18321 Page 6
The New American Home at IBS 2026 Joe Kannapell, PE Will trusses will be part of new American homes in the future? That question has been the reason I keep a close eye on the home built for NAHB’s International Builders Show. Since 1984, this off-site exhibit, “The New American Home” (TNAH), has presented the latest innovations... Read More April 2026 Issue #18321
When Can an Engineered Connection Look Like a Member to Member Gap? Glenn Traylor Sometimes, a designed and engineered connection will appear to look like a member to member gap. Because of that, we need to ask the question: should the truss designer always try to eliminate a member to member gap in a truss? Generally speaking, yes, it’s always worthwhile, but there are... Read More April 2026 Issue #18321 Page 19
The Material Yield Opportunity Wendy Boyd Structural building component manufacturers across North America often track metrics like walls, floors, and trusses shipped each day, labor hours per unit, machine uptime, and on-time delivery. These numbers are important, but they don’t tell the whole story. There’s a quieter... Read More April 2026 Issue #18321 Page 29
Catch the Lumber, Then Smell the Roses Edmond Lim, P.Eng. I’ve been to Boston a few times, but like most business and installation trips, it usually goes the same way: fly into the airport, drive a few hours, get the work done, and head straight back home. There’s never any time to actually pause and “stop to smell the... Read More April 2026 Issue #18321 Page 40
It’s Not a People Problem, It’s a Clarity Problem Todd Drummond Good people show up. They work hard. They care. Yet output still stalls, quality still slips, due dates still move, and managers still spend too much of their day answering questions, expediting work, and solving the same problems again and again. Because when work is unclear, effort gets... Read More April 2026 Issue #18321 Page 50
Moving Lumber Keeps Getting Easier Kathryn Pedde When we launched JAX over 2½ years ago, we knew we were building something special even though JAX breaks no new ground in technology. JAX uses a proven industrial-grade material handling system combined with vacuum-operated lumber pickup heads, which can be configured in multiple ways to... Read More April 2026 Issue #18321 Page 62
Say Hello to AMT Robotics Garry Roehr Last fall, I had the chance to catch up with many of my peers at BCMC Omaha, and now I’m pleased to say Hello to an even wider audience. As an Industrial Engineer with 3 decades’ experience in PreFab, I am eager to share our innovative solutions to continue to help move our industry... Read More April 2026 Issue #18321 Page 70
Sales Tools: How Equipment Financing Drives Growth in Wood Component Manufacturing Carl Villella In an industry defined by efficiency, you aren’t just selling a piece of iron; you are providing a self-funding production tool. If a new linear saw reduces waste and labor costs by $15,000 a month and the finance/lease payment is only $4,000, the sale is no longer an expense —... Read More April 2026 Issue #18321 Page 79
2026 Hiring Outlook: Warning Signs or Just Delayed? Candidates and employers keep asking me the same question — what am I seeing in hiring trends for 2026? The honest answer is “it’s complicated.” The more honest answer is that I don’t think the market has made up its mind yet. It’s April and, under normal... Read More April 2026 Issue #18321 Page 88