Joist Span β The clear horizontal distance a joist covers between supports (beams, ledger boards, or foundation walls). Not the same as the joist's physical length, which includes bearing on supports at each end.
Live Load β The variable, movable load a floor must support β people, furniture, and equipment. Residential floors: 40 psf. Sleeping areas: 30 psf (IRC exception). Decks: 40 psf minimum.
Dead Load β The permanent, self-weight load of the floor assembly β joists, subfloor, flooring material, and ceiling below. Typical floor dead load: 10β15 psf. Tile floors add more than carpet or hardwood.
Deflection Limit β The maximum allowable sag of a floor joist under load. IRC uses L/360 for live load (span in inches Γ· 360). A 15-ft span (180") may deflect at most 0.5" under live load. Tile floors require L/480 or stiffer.
Species Group β Wood species are grouped by their structural properties. Douglas Fir-Larch and Southern Yellow Pine are the strongest (Group I). Spruce-Pine-Fir and Hem-Fir are Group II. Species group affects allowable span.
MOE (Modulus of Elasticity) β A measure of wood's stiffness in bending. Higher MOE = less deflection at the same load. Douglas Fir: ~1,900,000 psi. Spruce-Pine-Fir: ~1,500,000 psi. MOE controls deflection-governed span limits.