A gable roof is a roof that slopes downward from a central ridge to a building s exterior walls on two.
Load bearing wall hip roof.
However a house with a hip roof structure suggests that all the exterior walls are bearing walls.
Just to be on the side of caution i would install an 8ft 4x4 directly centered under the splice with lag bolts and remove the vertical.
These walls directly support roof trusses or rafters.
Not all exterior walls are bearing walls though.
Any wall on all floors directly above or parallel to a basement beam typically wood steel i beam or a basement wall must be considered by a layman as directly load bearing.
But if the wall runs perpendicular at a 90 degree angle to the joists there is a good chance that it is load bearing.
The wall you are wanting to remove is not a bearing wall by looking at the framing in the attic and the roof lines of the house.
Generally when the wall in question runs parallel to the floor joists above it is not a load bearing wall.
Stair well openings are also typically load bearing points.
My home is different.
The exception would be in the case of a hip roof were ceiling joists often change direction at each end of the house and a wall is run crossways to support the inside ends of the joist the ceiling joists appear to change direction directly above one of the walls.
If the wall in question is on the second floor look to see if there is a.
Because i have a hip roof that slopes towards each exterior wall each of those walls is carrying some roof weight.
The exterior walls on houses that support the roof are primary bearing walls.
There are many houses where just the front and back walls are bearing walls.
Side walls are primary load bearing walls in simple gable end framing but hip roofs and complex roof lines depend on more than just the side.
A bearing wall will run in the same direction as the ridge of your roof.
The important thing to remember is that if a wall is load bearing it is transferring that load to something underneath it.