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Wendy Boyd

Building Capacity Without Breaking Workflow

Wendy Boyd

Let’s face it: growth is exciting, scary, and a great problem to tackle. But in component manufacturing, increased demand can quickly expose pressure points on the floor. What once felt smooth starts to feel tight. Work in progress (WIP) builds up and becomes expensive. Teams must work...

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March 2026
Issue #18320
Page 29
Edmond Lim, P.Eng.

Automation for Greenfield OR Retrofit Truss Plants

Edmond Lim, P.Eng.

For inspiration to Feed the Beast! in 2026, the mandate is clear to automate, however, the path to automation looks different depending on your starting point. Let’s compare two standout 2025 LimTek installations—a greenfield plant and a modernizing retrofit—to see how...

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March 2026
Issue #18320
Page 36
Todd Drummond

Board Foot and Work Minutes Can Coexist

Todd Drummond

Board foot has been used for decades in component manufacturing, and it still serves its purpose for sales reporting, legacy KPIs, and corporate roll ups. There is no need to abandon it. But for scheduling, pricing, and determining how much work a plant can actually handle, board foot alone will...

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March 2026
Issue #18320
Page 46
Paragon Team

A Small Booth in a Big Industry: Why Exhibit?

Paragon Team

In the middle of the largest residential construction show in the world, wedged between estimating software and the kitchen and bath aisle, our small booth was focused on one question: where do structural components truly fit in the future of homebuilding? The International Builders Show...

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March 2026
Issue #18320
Page 58
Paul Schmidt

Building Homes for Heroes in Florida

Paul Schmidt

Although all of our companies are focused on their bottom lines, many of us also welcome opportunities to give back to our communities. TechWood had one such opportunity this year, when we partnered with Global Fireproof Solutions, Inc. to support the construction and renovation of a...

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March 2026
Issue #18320
Page 66
Craig Webb

Deals Report 2025: Tracking the Openings, Closings, and Acquisitions

Craig Webb

The biggest, deepest report on acquisitions, new-store openings, and closures in construction supply makes clear 2025 simultaneously was both the busiest and slowest year for M&A in this decade. Viewed by the number of facilities acquired, 2025 saw 56% more locations acquired than in 2024...

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March 2026
Issue #18320
Page 76
Thom McAnally

Change Order Discipline to Protect Your Bottom Line

In off-site manufacturing, change is inevitable. What is not inevitable is losing money because of it. The change order is not red tape. It is protection. It protects the company, the client, the project schedule, and even the salesperson who worked hard to land the job. Consider how a...

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March 2026
Issue #18320
Page 86
Geordie Secord

Design Connections: Prevent Scope Creep Becoming “Just the Way We Do Things”

Geordie Secord

My December article, “What Does Scope Creep Look Like in Truss Design?,” talks about extra trusses quietly added, parapets suddenly included, and engineering tasks drifting onto your desk because someone else didn’t handle them. None of these start out as big asks. They usually...

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March 2026
Issue #18320
Page 96
MSR Lumber Producers Council

Where MSR Expertise Meets Real-World Application

MSR Lumber Producers Council

Every spring, a few dozen of the most MSR-savvy minds in the industry gather for something refreshingly different from the typical industry conference. No sprawling trade show floor. No overwhelming schedule. No wandering through crowds of people you might never see again. Instead, the annual...

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March 2026
Issue #18320
Page 106
Frank Woeste and Marvin Strzyzewski

Interpreting the Snow Load Thermal Factor

Frank Woeste and Marvin Strzyzewski

When given a truss design project, the Truss Designer needs all of the loading parameters before starting work on it. This article will specifically discuss the Thermal Factor (Ct), which is part of the snow load calculations. As with any load parameter, using the wrong value will result in a...

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March 2026
Issue #18320
Page 118
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